René Burri – the 80-year-old Swiss photographer has long been a

Transcription

René Burri – the 80-year-old Swiss photographer has long been a
The magazine for the swiss abroad
o c t o b e r 2 0 1 3 / N o . 5
René Burri –
the 80-year-old Swiss photographer
has long been a legend
Swiss tourism –
balancing tradition and
new trends
National ice hockey team –
hopes and fears
ahead of Sochi
O R G A N I S AT I O N O F T H E S W I S S A B R O A D
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Editorial
contents
Viewpoints and perceptions
I
nterlaken was the stage of a strange spectacle this mid-September:
Ueli Maurer, Swiss President and, in this capacity, guest speaker at the conference of the Swiss publishing industry, was met with boos and jeers instead
of applause. What had happened? Maurer had expressed his views to the publishing industry gathered before him. He had said that a media monopoly on opinion existed in Switzerland, media coverage was one-sided, everyone took the same
line and the concerns of Maurer’s Swiss People’s Party (SVP) were suppressed as
much as possible. His analysis annoyed the senior management of the media groups
so much that they lost their composure. It is not just embarrassing, it is also alarming that the media – the newspapers, radio stations and television channels that
analyse and criticise the work of politicians, and many other figures, on a daily basis, should react so sensitively to criticism of their own endeavours. This is not the
place to assess whether Maurer’s analysis was right or not – as is so often the case,
it is a matter of perception.
There was also an opportunity for reflection on perceptions
in Switzerland after 1 August. Many prominent speakers – including Ueli Maurer, who appeared at nine different venues –
contemplated Switzerland’s role and its relationships with the
rest of the world on Swiss National Day. Some quotations from
speeches made on 1 August can be found on page 31.
How Switzerland is perceived in the world also depends heavily on what places foreign visitors – commonly known as tourists – visit in our country and what experiences they have. How tourism in Switzerland is changing – and needs to change – and what this means for our country is
explored in the article on our focus topic on page 8 onwards.
A fierce referendum debate will take place in Switzerland over the coming weeks.
The battle over the 1:12 initiative, which calls for the highest salary in a company to
be capped at twelve times the lowest, is being fought with the gloves off – and with
figures and statistics that differ greatly depending on the political standpoint. The
background to the arguments for and against the initiative is outlined on page 15.
A look at the statistics on wealth and prosperity in Switzerland and the rest of the
world is also interesting in this respect. According to Credit Suisse statistics, one
thousandth of the world’s population lives in Switzerland and one percent of all billionaires. In Switzerland, one percent of the population owns 58.9 percent of the national wealth. In Denmark, the figure is 36.1 percent, in the USA 34.1, in France 28.7
and in the UK 20.1. Germany is in ninth place with 17.3 percent. This concentration
of wealth in Switzerland is clearly the result not just of large salaries and other income but also of the tax situation. Many foreign governments are aware of this and
are responding accordingly – the new inheritance tax agreement sought by France
is just one such example.
Barbara Engel
5
Mailbag
5
Books: Switzerland under the scrutiny of a
German journalist
6
Images: The strong men in the sawdust ring
at the Federal Alpine Wrestling Festival
8
Swiss tourism faces major challenges
12
“Dölf” Ogi – portrait of the former Federal
Councillor
15
The Young Socialists’ 1:12 initiative is causing a furore
Regional news
17
Voting: Review and preview
18
René Burri is constantly taking photographs – many of them have become iconic
22
The unexpected succsess of the
Swiss ice hockey team
24
Literature series: Hans Ormund Bringolf
25
OSA news
27
Notes from Parliament
30
Echo
S wiss R eview October 2013 / No. 5
Cover photo: René Burri, photographed by Sandro
Campardo at the Musée de l’Elysée in Lausanne
during the “René Burri – Retrospective 1950–
2000” exhibition in 2004.
IMPRint: “Swiss Review”, the magazine for the Swiss abroad, is in its 40th year of publication and is published in German, French, Italian, English and Spanish in 14 regional editions.
It has a total circulation of 400,000, including 140,000 electronic copies. Regional news appears four times a year. The ordering parties are fully responsible for the content of advertisements and promotional inserts. This content does not necessarily represent the opinion of either the editorial office or the publisher. ■ EDITORS: Barbara Engel (BE), Editor-in-Chief; Marc
Lettau (MUL); Jürg Müller (JM); Alain Wey (AW); Peter Zimmerli (PZ), responsible for “Notes from Parliament”, Relations with the Swiss Abroad, FDFA, 3003 Berne, Switzerland. Translation: CLS Communication AG ■ LAYOUT: Herzog Design, Zurich ■ POSTAL ADDRESS: Publisher, editorial office, advertising: Organi­sation ­of the Swiss
Abroad, Alpenstrasse 26, 3006 Berne, Tel.: +41313566110, Fax: +41313566101, Postal account (Swiss National Giro): 30-6768-9. ■ EMAIL: [email protected] ■
PRINT: Vogt-Schild Druck AG, 4552 Derendingen. ■ All Swiss abroad who are registered with a Swiss representation receive the magazine free of charge.
Anyone else can subscribe to the magazine for an annual fee (Switzerland: CHF 30 / abroad: CHF 50). Subscribers are sent the magazine direct from Berne.
■ INTERNET: www.revue.ch ■ Copy deadline for this edition: 23.09.2013
■ CHANGE OF ADDRESS: Please advise your local embassy or consulate. Do not write to the editorial office in Berne.
3
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Books
Highest compliments
I want to compliment you and
your staff on the outstanding
recent issues of the “Swiss Review”. I find them to be so
much improved. As a retired
transportation engineer and
researcher, I especially appreciated the cover photo and pictures of the Rhaetian Railway
in the August Review. More
important is the coverage you
give to issues of importance to
Swiss people. Swiss newspaper
articles cover daily happenings,
but the comprehensive overview you give an issue is refreshing and helps me to understand Swiss people’s views.
Thank you for the superb job
you are doing.
Campbell Graeub
Washington, DC, USA
Deeply offended
We are deeply offended by your
article “Voluntary military service?”. In it you write and I
quote: “Maurer also points to
the enormous recruitment
problems of volunteer armies.
He says Spain has to draft in
people from South America,
and the UK recruits its volunteers from prisons.” That, my
dear man, is totally untrue and
extremely offensive to our volunteer soldiers who lay their
lives on the line for their country. The UK does not recruit
from prisons. This is a slander
to say the least by Mr. Maurer,
and disrespectful to British soldiers.
Edith Mason, via email
Sw i s s R e v i e w October 2013 / No. 5
Unconditional Basic Income
I am very pleased the Swiss will
be voting on unconditional basic income UBI in an upcoming
referendum. UBIs will be crucial to sustaining societies in future, calling for immense
change in government, work,
education, and families, but
they can/will succeed – if kept
simple. The Manitoba Social
Experiment, a pilot UBI that
was buried, demonstrated that
some did not work – as has been
and will be the case in every society – some continued with the
same work, and some chose entirely different work!
Selma Nussbaumer-Roth
Deep River, Canada
Basic income, seriously...
An interesting article but, honestly, receiving money for nothing in return? I might have oldfashioned views but this simply
will not work. Someone earning
6,000 Swiss francs is to suddenly receive just 3,500? What
is the point of that? It equates to
a 42% pay cut. And who is going
to meet all the costs? I can’t imagine that prices in Switzerland
will fall to the same extent. Be
realistic, people – forget this
nonsense and start doing a
proper job instead of filling the
minds of the public with such
pipe dreams.
Rene Schneider,
Manly Vale, Australia
Switzerland plans its postnuclear energy future
Many thanks for this extremely
informative article. So, Switzerland is now also planning to enter the age of so-called “renewable” energies after the shock of
the Fukushima disaster. Having
read the article, I get the impression that this is taking place
in true Swiss fashion based on
objective debate between the
various interest groups. I trust
and hope for Switzerland’s sake
that decisions will ultimately be
taken without the ideological
blinkers that have led to ridiculous, billion-euro bad investments by Switzerland’s northern neighbour and consequently
to undesirable developments
and additional costs that nobody foresaw due to their political blindness.
Werner Geiser,
Gelsenkirchen, Germany
Switzerland: a self-experiment
Mailbag
do you really have to walk through the Gotthard railway
tunnel with two railway linesmen in order to understand
Switzerland? Of course not, even if the book’s title is: “33
things you must do in Switzerland”. But the example illustrates the lengths gone to by the author Wolfgang Koydl,
Switzerland correspondent for the “Süddeutsche Zeitung”.
The book’s subtitle is “A Teutonic Self-Experiment”. Koydl
had never visited Switzerland before taking up his post in
2011. This is now his second book on the subject of his
journalistic observations.
This German writer is clearly fascinated by Switzerland.
He finds the country inexhaustible and “richer than some
larger countries that have long since lost many traditions
and peculiarities to the uniformity of the global mainstream”, as Koydl writes in the foreword. He has gathered
together well-known and little-known facts about politics, culture, business, sport and traditions and has not shied away from
looking at clichés either. He has produced a collection of short
pieces of reportage in which he is often the main protagonist.
The reader accompanies the author when he visits the major
Swiss bank UBS on Zurich’s Paradeplatz to open an account and
gets the bank employee all flustered by adopting a feigned naivety. We go with him to the nearby Bahnhofstrasse where he
enters a luxury watch shop to ask seemingly inappropriate questions (“Why are these watches all so chunky?”). We look over his
shoulder when he observes goings-on on the Jungfraujoch and
when he does voluntary work in the remote Val Calanca. Koydl
also sits behind the steering wheel of a large Swiss Postbus, discovers what it is like to be overpowered during a bout of Swiss
wrestling, and attends a course on Swiss dialect. He is present
during the recruitment of Swiss guards, spends a day lounging
around the Federal Palace, studies the architecture and symbolic
language of the parliament building and concludes: “The Swiss
Parliament’s setting is rather theatrical, but
its members are less so.”
With an at times almost ethnological approach, he outlines the country’s peculiarities – always with a comic touch and sometimes with deliberate exaggeration. Each
piece of reportage also contains some well
concealed basic information. Despite the extensive use of humour in his writing, the author goes on record as saying that he has
come to admire and greatly respect his host
country. The polished and expert writing and elegant and ironic
use of language make this book a very enjoyable read. It not
only lends itself as introductory reading for foreigners living in
Switzerland but also provides sophisticated insights for Swiss at
home and abroad. What could enhance your perception of your
own country more than an outsider’s clever and mischievous observations? Probably very few Swiss have made such strenuous
efforts to personally experience so many different facets of their
own country. JÜRG MÜLLER
Wolfgang Koydl, “33 Dinge, die man in der Schweiz unbedingt getan haben
sollte”. Orell Füssli Verlag, Zurich 2013. 239 pages. CHF 19.90, around EUR 16.
5
6
Images
S w i ss R e v i e w October 2013 / No. 5
Photos: Swiss-Image / Andy Mettler & Monika Flückiger
A king called Sempach – photos
from the route to his coronation
He is 27 years old, 194 cm tall, weighs 110 kg, lives in Alchendorf in the canton of Berne, and was crowned champion
of Swiss wrestling on 1 September 2013. Matthias Sempach
7
was undefeated in eight bouts at the Federal Alpine Wrestling
Festival in Burgdorf. In the final, he triumphed over Christian
Stucki from Lyss, who weighs 150 kg and is 198 cm tall. There
were also three Swiss abroad among the 278 wrestlers: Florian
Hofmann from Norway – who survived all eight rounds – as
well as Roger Badat and Daniel Kundert from Canada.
8
Focus
From a world of glaciers to a fun park
Swiss tourism is going through hard times. The strong franc is deterring many of
our traditional visitors from Europe, while new offerings are needed for our new,
largely Asian, customers.
By Hubert Mooser
S w i ss R e v i e w October 2013 / No. 5
Photos: swiss-image /Roland Gerth
The Jungfraujoch, 3,471 metres above sea level,
boasts Europe’s highest train station and the
gateway to a world of glaciers and mountains
that even non-alpinists find impressive. The
throng of people on sunny days is huge. To prevent visitors from stepping on one another’s
toes, the Jungfrau Railway lets no more than
5,000 people per day ride up to the “Top of Europe”. Up there, between the Mönch and the
Jungfrau, growing trends in global travel are
clear to see: while the Japanese have long since
become commonplace on the mountains, the
number of visitors hailing from India, China
and the rich Gulf States has been growing in
recent years. These countries, along with Russia, Brazil and Australia, represent the new
growth markets for Switzerland Tourism.
Asian guests are being touted by the media as
saviours of the tourism industry – during the
first six months of this year, they contributed
7.4 percent more overnight stays for the Swiss
hotel industry. The number of overnight stays
by Chinese tourists rose a whopping 22 percent. However, these success stories stand in
sharp contrast to the current mood in winter
sports resorts where business with the traditional, affluent clientele from EU countries
such as Germany and France is sluggish.
The climate factor
Urs Eberhard, Vice-President of Switzerland Tourism and Head of Markets and
No longer satisfying
tourists: the magnificent alpine panorama
at the Gornergrat in
the top photo and the
pristine ski slopes
Meetings, knows better than anybody just
how important guests from Europe are for
the tourism industry: “These guests still
generate by far the largest percentage of
overnight hotel stays,” he says. In 2012,
guests from Australia, Brazil, China, the
Gulf States, India, Indonesia, Korea, Malaysia, Russia, Singapore, Taiwan and Thailand
accounted for around 10 percent of overnight stays in Swiss hotels. Tourists from
neighbouring countries, the Benelux countries and Great Britain, on the other hand,
made up over 30 percent in 2012 and the
Swiss around 45 percent. The strong franc
has prompted many tourists from these
countries to choose other more affordable
destinations in recent years. The total number of overnight stays has seen a decline of
nearly 7 percent since 2008, and this drop
has hit alpine holiday tourism particularly
hard.
Even more alarming to the promoters of
Swiss tourism are other developments, such
as climate change. When glaciers melt, tourist attractions are lost. A striking example of
this is the Rhone glacier at the top corner of
the canton of Valais. It has been shrinking
in volume year after year, reducing the certainty of snow in resorts at lower levels and
increasing the potential threat of natural catastrophes. Diminishing interest in skiing is
9
another worrying development. Norbert
Patt, CEO of Titlis Rotair in Engelberg, says
that the market is tough and shrinking –
partly due to demographic trends. With the
baby boom generation entering retirement
age, hiking and golfing, not skiing, are the
activities of choice. The vast majority of
mountain railways, however, depend on winter tourism for their survival; most of them
generate 90 to 95 percent of their revenue
during the winter. “We will have surplus capacity in future since skiing regions will not
close even though there are fewer skiers,”
says Patt. In addition, quality expectations
among guests have risen and competition
from rivals in other countries is becoming
fiercer. Acceptance of the second home initiative in March 2012, which limits the construction of holiday apartments, has further
exacerbated the structural difficulties of alpine holiday resorts.
Bodenmann, former President of the Social
Democratic Party and National Councillor,
and now a hotel owner in Brig, says that the
state should obligate the owners of hotels
and holiday homes to purchase annual tickets for the mountain railways. Not only
would that fill beds and skiing regions, it
would also make skiing holidays cheaper.
Guglielmo Brentel, President of Hotelleriesuisse, openly expresses his criticism of the
industry: “We have a few lousy hotels here
and they have to go.” Switzerland Tourism
S w i ss R e v i e w October 2013 / No. 5
Photos: swiss-image
Support from the Federal Council
This means there are difficult times ahead
for alpine holiday resorts and mountain railways. How to help is a question being considered at the highest level. Federal Councillor Johann Schneider-Ammann,
Switzerland’s Economics Minister, wants to
spend 200 million francs on giving the industry a helping hand. He believes the Swiss
tourism industry, by international comparison, is too expensive and organised too locally. There are in fact 561 organisations
throughout Switzerland working to promote
tourism and 90 percent of the hotels have
fewer than 50 beds. In the tourism industry,
responses vary widely, from morale-boosting calls to friendliness campaigns to demands for radical cuts. Roland Zegg, CEO
of the Tourism Forum for Alpine Regions,
recently said in an interview that winter
sports resorts had to learn to live with the
fact that “core markets are stagnating or
even on the decline”. Anybody claiming that
skiing simply wasn’t “in” anymore should be
ignored, he said. New packages were needed,
offering something sexy and innovative, enjoyment and relaxation – especially if you do
not have a Matterhorn.
Nobody is very worried in Zermatt, where
the Matterhorn stands. Resort director
Daniel Luggen does not expect that “we will
have fewer skiers in the short or even medium term”. Some 1.2 billion francs is set to
be invested in infrastructure expansion over
the course of the next ten years. Peter
Tourists from Asia
usually want to see as
many attractions as
possible in a short
space of time – almost
all tours include visits
to the cities of Berne
and Lucerne and a trip
to the Jungfraujoch
is trying a different approach: a hospitality
Oscar has been created, which will be
awarded to the most customer-friendly hotels in Switzerland.
Nature was once adventure enough
Brothers Johann Rudolf and Hieronymus
Meyer were most likely unaware of what
kind of avalanche they would be causing
when they climbed the Jungfrau’s 4,158-metre peak on 3 August 1811 together with their
guides, Joseph Bortis and Alois Volken.
10
Focus
S w i ss R e v i e w October 2013 / No. 5
Photo: swiss-image
Nature parks proving popular
The Binn Valley is known the
world over for its minerals. This
sleepy side valley in Valais, where
Swiss director Claude Goretta
filmed Charles-Ferdinand Ramuz’s
novel “Si le soleil ne revenait pas”
(If the Sun were Never to Return)
in the 1980s, relies on sustainable tourism. For example, the Hotel Ofenhorn, which dates back to
the Belle Époque, has been reno-
vated with great attention to detail. Today it is a listed building.
The Binn Valley’s recognition as a
regional nature park in 2011 was
a stroke of luck for the hotel.
This attracted both national and
international attention. “In the
past six or seven years we’ve
managed to double our turnover,”
says Andreas Weissen, president
of the organisation Pro Binntal,
which revived the guesthouse
years ago. For the past few years
Weissen’s main job has been as
director of the Swiss Parks Network. He says that while parkland may present an opportunity,
you still have to make something
of it. He sees the greatest potential for the future in nature and
cultural tourism. A new study
also reveals how worthwhile
these parklands are: 16 percent
of the guests in Entlebuch, which
also has a nature park, visited
the region because of this reserve. The national park in the
Lower Engadine was also the
main attraction for 35 percent of
visitors. Apart from the national
park, there are currently 14 regional nature parks and one nature discovery park that are subsidised by the federal
government.
That climb was akin to the start of alpine
tourism in Switzerland. The real boom began 40 to 50 years later with English alpinists like Edward Whymper, who became the
first person to stand atop the Matterhorn in
1865. Yet, there was not big money to be
made from mountain climbing alone. Ways
and means were also needed to transport
non-climbers to regions high in the Alps.
The idea of building a railway leading up to
the Jungfrau was first proposed in 1869. The
timing was right since at that time Switzerland was in the grip of a delusion that everything was possible, spurred on by railway development linking the alpine valleys. Railway
projects were springing up all over the place:
in Lucerne, work began in 1886 on a railway
from Alpnachstad to Mount Pilatus. 1896
brought the start of construction for a railway to the Gornergrat in Zermatt, and in
Martigny, in Lower Valais, the MartignyChâtelard railway was built to connect the
wild Val de Trient to the French resort of
Chamonix at the foot of Mont Blanc. In
their new function as stopovers between the
Rhone Valley and Chamonix, sleepy mountain villages such as Finhaut were suddenly
transformed into fashionable holiday destinations with luxury hotels. Towards the end
of the 19th century, Finhaut became a meeting point for England’s upper crust. Back
then, experiencing nature and being close to
the mountains was adventure enough. Finhaut’s rapid decline began when skiing
gained in popularity after the Second World
War and summer tourism was relegated to a
sideline business.
Importance of summer is growing
Ski tourism now seems to have passed its peak
as well. Switzerland Tourism is seeking to
make skiing attractive to guests from the new
growth markets. “We have defined China
and Brazil as potential source markets for
Swiss winter sports,” says Vice-President Urs
Eberhard. “There are around five million active skiers in China alone.” Switzerland enjoys an extremely good reputation in China
and is the number one foreign winter destination on people’s wish lists. At the moment,
Brazilians who enjoy winter sports are more
likely to be drawn to France. “But we anticipate opportunities for us there, too.” The potential exists, he says. According to Eberhard,
however, there are signs that summer tourism will play a more prominent role in the future, in part because of the new growth mar-
kets but also as a result of looming climate
change, says Eberhard. The Alps have not
lost their fascination, and climate change
could even bring additional guests to higher
mountain regions if the cities start to get too
hot.
For the time being, however, guests from
these new faraway markets only visit a few
locations in Switzerland. They breeze
through the well-known sights: Zurich, Lucerne, Mount Pilatus, Mount Titlis, Interlaken and the Jungfraujoch, then the “Zytglogge” tower in Berne and on to Zermatt.
Hotel owners in Zurich and Lucerne are delighted. Zurich Tourism reported a 20 percent increase among Chinese guests during
the first half of 2013. In the Lucerne region,
guests from China rose 8 percent during the
same timeframe. This development does,
however, have some drawbacks: there is
growing displeasure in Lucerne about the
many coaches clogging the streets and
blocking the squares. At the moment, these
group trips are largely motivated by “showcase products”, as Eberhard calls Switzerland’s well-known sights. Much like a visit
to Paris would be inconceivable without seeing the Eiffel Tower, touring Switzerland
without visiting Lucerne and Mount Titlis
or Interlaken and the Jungfraujoch would be
unthinkable. There is also a growing number of more seasoned guests, and the call for
originality and authenticity is growing
louder. Switzerland is challenged to create
new destinations, routes and showcase products and add these to tour operators’ catalogues.
This brings a certain pressure on hotels
and guesthouses to adapt. “If guests come
from new cultural environments, some
changes have to be made to the products and
services offered,” says René Klopfer, President of the Interlaken Hotel Association,
which has a number of years’ experience
with guests from India and the Middle East.
It used to be that hotels had to adapt to the
English way of life. “The British tradition of
‘afternoon tea’ was also once unknown in
Switzerland.” Now the new guests hail from
India. That means more vegetarian options
in the breakfast buffet, like tomatoes, eggs
and cucumbers, says hotel owner René Klopfer. Chinese guests, on the other hand, need
a lot of hot water for preparing their own
herbal blends from home, and German
guests still appreciate coffee and cake when
they return from a hike. Other hotels go
11
even further: the Hotel Metropol laid a carpet with an in-built compass so that Muslim
guests would find it easy to know which way
to face for Mecca during their prayers. A
conference room can also be converted into
a prayer room on request. “Accommodating
several cultures under one roof is a huge
challenge,” says Klopfer. Sometimes it is a
nearly impossible balancing act.
S w i ss R e v i e w October 2013 / No. 5
Photos: swiss.image
Ice caves and spectacular ­
suspension bridges
Changes also have to be made up at the top
– in the mountains. Simply transporting a
few Indian tourists to the peak without a tailored offering for them is not enough, says
Patt of Titlis Rotair. “Indian tourists do not
want to go downhill mountain biking or hiking, they come to Switzerland to experience
snow in the mountains.” Titlis Rotair is focusing on the concept of “feeling snow”. One
such initiative decades ago was the creation
of an ice grotto in the glacier – and this cave
has been such a success of late that the perspiration of the multitude of visitors is causing the glacier to melt. Now machines are
needed to keep it cool. Another attraction
was created with the construction of Europe’s highest suspension bridge, the “Titlis
Cliff Walk”, which traverses a 500-metre
deep abyss at an elevation of 3,020 metres.
The purpose of this is to attract additional
visitors.
People like Otto Steiner of Nidwalden are
working hard to come up with fresh ideas for
the holiday resorts. He creates so-called
worlds of experience for resorts throughout
Europe with the goal of boosting summer
tourist figures. Steiner is a man in demand.
He has designed a new visitor trail on the
Jungfraujoch for the Jungfrau Railway and
a spectacular observation platform for the
Fiesch-Eggishorn aerial cableway.
Not everybody is happy about these developments, however. The Swiss Foundation
for Landscape Conservation has been observing the Alps’ transformation into a fun
park with growing concern. With the number of skiers down and in an effort to fill
mountain railways, tourist towns have been
almost feverishly looking for new ways to attract visitors, says Anita Wyss, Project Manager at the Swiss Foundation for Landscape
Conservation. “It seems as though suspension bridges are considered some sort of miracle cure at the moment,” says Wyss. People
think if they have a suspension bridge the
Special attractions:
the “Titlis Cliff Walk”
at 3,020 metres, the
highest suspension
bridge in Europe, and
the 180 km2 Binn Valley nature park in
Valais
visitors will come as well. That might be true
in the short term. Wyss doubts, however,
that suspension bridges will generate a longterm increase in the number of visitors. In
fact, one might wonder why anybody would
come back to a valley multiple times simply
because of a suspension bridge.
Even a sure-fire tourist attraction like the
railway to the Jungfraujoch is planning additional investments in the next few years –
to carry even more guests up the mountain.
New shuttles are planned to transport people to Europe’s highest train station even
more quickly. There were 833,000 visitors
in 2012. Following this expansion, if not before, the annual number of visitors should
hit the one-million mark. At least the Jungfrau Railway does not have to worry much
about the future.
Hubert Mooser is an editor at the “Tages
Anzeiger”. He comes from Valais and lives in Berne.
Figures and trends
The Swiss hotel industry recovered somewhat during the first half of 2013. Compared
with the same period of the previous year, the number of overnight stays rose 1.2%
to a total of 17.1 million. Domestic guests accounted for 7.6 million of those, 0.5%
more than in 2012. There was an increase of 7.4% or 107,000 nights in the number of
overnight stays by tourists from Asia. China (excluding Hong Kong) was up 22%
(+62,000). That is the highest rate of absolute growth among all the various countries of origin. Good news for the Swiss hotel industry: overnight stays by guests
from Europe (not including Switzerland) rose by a total of 29,000 (+0.4%) despite the
fact that fewer guests came from the main tourist countries: Germany -2.7%, the
Netherlands -3.2%, Italy -1.2% and France -0.6%. The Swiss Federal Statistical Office
(FSO) reported a 2.9% increase year-on-year in overnight stays for the months of October to December 2012. Overnight hotel stays reached a high of 35.6 million in 1990,
a figure that has only been exceeded once since then, namely in 2008.
12
Portrait
“Der Ogi” and matters of the heart
He has not been part of the Federal Council for over a decade. He steers clear of politics. Former Swiss President Adolf Ogi is nevertheless still considered by many people today as the embodiment of a decent politician. He is much in demand and has a high media profile. Switzerland sees in him the last down-to-earth
father of the nation with old-school values. So, what exactly is he doing? Focusing his efforts on helping
the disadvantaged and those in need. – We take a hike to meet Adolf Ogi in the wilds of Gasterntal.
By Marc Lettau
ten about Ogi the politician and the man.
The English translation of the biography already available in German and French will
appear in the autumn. A non-academic, Ogi,
who his political opponents constantly alleged came from a poorly educated background, is today found on tens of thousands
of Swiss bookshelves.
Greater acceptance than when
actively engaged in politics
S w i ss R e v i e w October 2013 / No. 5
Photo: Remo Nägeli
Adolf Ogi with children from Eastern Europe who receive medical care thanks to the Swisscor foundation
You sometimes have to observe things at a
sufficient distance. For example, in summer
1992, NASA’s space shuttle Atlantis sped
around Earth 127 times. Claude Nicollier,
Switzerland’s first and only astronaut to
date, was aboard. It was a big step for Nicollier and a giant step for Swiss space travel.
The shuttle hurtled around the planet at
30,000 kilometres an hour. It is just that
what Nicollier did in the freezing depths of
outer space left no mark on Switzerland’s
collective consciousness. In contrast, the
words that Federal Councillor Adolf Ogi
shouted to Nicollier through the ether on 7
August 1992 via a sophisticated radio link remain etched in the mind: “Freude herrscht,
Monsieur Nicollier!” ( Joy abounds, Monsieur Nicollier!) – the words of congratulation immediately became a turn of phrase.
Quoted thousands of times, it has become
part of Swiss German vocabulary. Joy is
even more wonderful when it not only exists but is ubiquitous, when “joy abounds”.
Distance from politics
The roles could not have been assigned more
perfectly, as Ogi is not one for exploring the
cosmos. He is very much grounded and has
a strong attachment to his homeland. He has
mountain roots and a way of aptly expressing emotion and facts in just a few words like
the inscriptions carved into wood on the old
farm dwellings near his home in Kandersteg.
Ogi does not hold any political office today.
Nor has he been pulling the strings behind
the scenes for his party, the Swiss People’s
Party (SVP), since standing down from the
Federal Council. “Der Ogi” has nevertheless remained a prominent figure in Swiss
life, almost like the embodiment of a father
of the nation. The politician who was ridiculed as much as he was admired comes
across as a man with no hidden agenda – Ogi
does what he says. And Ogi says what he
thinks. Making calculated statements is not
his way. Ogi continues to dependably and
tirelessly inspire confidence.
Ten enquiries, eleven refusals
“I receive ten invitations every day and turn
eleven down,” remarks the 71-year-old. The
eleven refusals do not seem to tally with
Ogi’s constantly high public profile. He is in
great demand. Seven books have been writ-
It is typical of Ogi to be pleased about his
enduring appeal and popularity but to also
put it into perspective: “I was never the
textbook politician. I was a political newcomer, an interloper to some and perhaps a
bearer of hope to others.” The deeds of
those who bear hope are sometimes glorified. Ogi reflects: “I have the impression
that acceptance of my political achievements is greater today than when I was actively engaged in politics. Perhaps the level
of approval is even unjustifiably high today.” The traumatic events suffered by the
Ogi family may well also have brought him
closer to the people. In 2009, Adolf and
Katrin Ogi lost their son. Mathias Ogi
died at the age of just 35 from a rare form
of cancer. This was a tragedy for Ogi, a
man of great faith and hope: “I know that a
great many people have to deal with terrible strokes of fate. But the death of
Mathias is my greatest heartbreak. It
leaves you searching for answers but finding none.” His loss has made him appreciate how important young people are to
him.
On Ogi’s trail in Gasterntal
But which young people does he mean? The
best way to get an answer to this is not by
looking in the archives but instead by hiking through Ogi’s local area – taking in the
Bernese Oberland, then walking to Kandersteg and on to Gasterntal, this wilderness
with its rugged rock faces and raging waters.
Ogi invited all the leading world figures here
13
when he was a Federal Councillor. He went
hiking here with UN Secretary-General
Kofi Annan. He comes here when in need of
reinvigoration: “It is a valley of strength. It
is a special place that brings you closer to nature, puts our achievements into perspective
and forces us to reflect. Why are we here?
What is our purpose as human beings?” This
year he has come here on a rainy summer’s
day to show underprivileged children from
Moldova his “valley of strength”.
Rain, thunder, lightning – and Ogi
Highly animated, Ogi talks to the young visitors about the importance of respect and
showing consideration to people in need. He
draws their attention to the beauty of nature.
Spray falls down the mountain slopes on
both sides of the Gasterntal. Ogi points to
the force of the water and underlines that
“nature is always more powerful than man”.
Right at that point, the landscape is lit up by
lightning and a great clap of thunder rolls
down the valley: “And nature answers when
Ogi speaks.” Some of the youngsters laugh.
The children later thank him for the trip
with a round of song. He is touched and
wipes away tears.
During the direct link-up with Claude Nicollier in the Atlantis space shuttle in August 1992
“I want Switzerland to show
it has a heart”
S w i ss R e v i e w October 2013 / No. 5
Photos: Keystone
Seated at a table later, Ogi says: “You must
have noticed – that brought me to tears. The
struggles of these children really moved me.
It was like a film suddenly playing in my
mind.” A film about children in need, in poverty – poor in terms of material possessions,
poor in terms of prospects. This was not a
chance encounter; it is a legacy from Ogi’s
time on the Federal Council. As Defence
Minister, he set up the Swisscor foundation
in 2000. Swisscor invites needy and disabled
children from Eastern Europe to Switzerland and provides them with medical care
here: “I want Switzerland to show it has a
heart. I want these children to receive Swissquality care. I don’t want money to be sent
off somewhere simply to appease our conscience.”
New Year’s address as Swiss President in front of the Lötschberg tunnel in Kandersteg in December 1999
Contribution to a “better world”
Swisscor is Ogi’s social legacy from his Federal Council days. The “Freude herrscht”
( Joy Abounds) foundation, which he also
founded, combines social and sporting aspects. This institution aims to encourage
children to participate in sport and exercise.
Embracing former UN Secretary-General and friend Kofi Annan at the WEF in Davos in 2007
14
Portrait
By focusing on young people in his projects
and efforts, he is trying to make something
good come from the death of his son: “We
will not make the world a better place overnight. But we can improve it by focusing on
young people.” Ogi, once committed to elite
sport and the architect of Swiss Olympic
success in Sapporo in 1972, today primarily
sees sport as “part of the school of life, an expression of solidarity and a contribution to
integration”. Ogi says: “All children should
be allowed to make mistakes without this affecting the rest of their lives.” Sport affords
this opportunity, explains Ogi, the former
UN special adviser on sport for peace and
development.
He says nothing, but his thoughts
are very clear
Such commitment is, of course, ultimately
profoundly political. But what about his political commitment in general? Ogi remarks:
“I am still a political person. But I no longer
comment on day-to-day developments.”
The world of politics has changed since his
day: “Politics has become more complex. It
requires rapid decision-making, and we are
no longer surrounded by friends as in the
past.” This indirectly reveals how Ogi has
always perceived and conducted politics –
the building and maintaining of friendships.
When recalling anecdotes, François Mitterrand, Helmut Kohl and Gerhard Schröder
emerge not as “official counterparts” but instead as friends “who understood our political system extremely well”, and as friends
who also sometimes made demands of him.
When he wanted to leave after a reception
at the White House, Bill Clinton ordered
him to stay: “I got drunk in the interests of
Switzerland that evening.” Such good relaAdvertisement
tionships made dialogue easier. Switzerland
is today met more with a mixture of “envy
and respect”. The fact that “we are not members of anything” – not of the EU, not of
NATO, not of the G20 – makes itself felt.
He believes that any nation seeking to establish good relations with the rest of the world
cannot afford to remain on the outside. Ogi
says: “I’m not saying that we should join the
EU now, but we must find a modus vivendi.
That’s the only way forward.” This brings
him into conflict with his party’s official
line. That happens occasionally. Ogi, a man
in touch with the people, has also always dismissed as nonsense the popular election of
the Federal Council called for by the SVP
and since rejected by the Swiss people.
A man from the mountains with
a cosmopolitan outlook
Ogi is a mountain dweller. And mountain
dwellers have horizons that are limited – by
mountains. So, where did he get his heartwarming cosmopolitan outlook that gave
him a hangover after drinking with Bill
Clinton? Ogi explains that he learned to develop a global outlook, respect and tolerance
in Kandersteg, rectifying the distorted perception of mountain dwellers as people cut
off from the outside world. His father, a forest ranger and mountain guide, taught him
to show respect for tourist “outsiders”. Tourism also brought prosperity to the valley:
“My father went hiking with tourists while
working as a mountain guide. But they
meant more to him than a wage. They were
his gateway to the world.” It is this acceptance of outsiders during his youth that has
always prompted him to take a strong interest in the lives of Swiss citizens living abroad:
“There are few major Swiss clubs in Asia and
the Americas that I
have not visited,”
he says. He always
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Confident but
without huge
dreams
What major goals
remain for Adolf
Ogi? Sitting in the
candle-lit “Waldhaus” restaurant in
Adolf Ogi
Adolf “Dölf” Ogi was born in Kandersteg in 1942, the son of a forest
ranger and mountain guide. After
compulsory schooling at Kandersteg
primary school, he spent three years
at the business school in La Neuveville on Lake Biel. Ogi worked for
the Swiss Ski Association from 1964
and was its director from 1969. A promoter of sport, Ogi was elected to the
National Council in 1979 as a representative of the Swiss People’s Party
(SVP). In 1984, he was elected president of the SVP. He was a member of
the Swiss government from 1988 to
the end of 2000, initially as Minister
for Transport and Energy and from
1995 as Minister for Defence and
Sport. Ogi was responsible for Switzerland’s accession to NATO’s “Partnership for Peace” programme and for
sending Swiss soldiers to Bosnia and
Kosovo. After stepping down from
the Federal Council, Ogi became the
UN’s special adviser on sport for
peace and development. In this role,
he had an influence on the UN Year
of Sport (1995). Today, Ogi focuses
his efforts on humanitarian and
charitable organisations.
Gasterntal, he waves the question away. He
has in fact just said that he has yet to climb
Mont Blanc: “But the time for that has now
passed.” He has no particular dreams left: “I
am not fighting old age. I do look after my
health – I still have it in me to climb the
Blüemlisalp – but I do not feel I have to
prove anything in old age at any cost. I don’t
think to myself that there are tasks that I really must complete.” It is still pouring down
outside. “I’ve seen the world and I’m content,” says Ogi and reflects before continuing somewhat tentatively: “I am happy. I
have experienced the worst tragedy that any
one person could go through. But otherwise
I look back on a life that I am extremely
grateful for. I’ve been very fortunate.”
It is time to go. Some rather undecided,
drenched hikers are standing outside the
“Waldhaus” in the driving rain. Ogi goes over
to them and says: “Look at this magnificent
scenery! These mountains! This landscape!”
Everyone agrees that he is right.
Marc Lettau is an editor at “Swiss Review”
Politics
15
Major assault on executive remuneration
It is one of the most significant referenda on economic policy in recent history – on 24 November 2013,
the Swiss people will vote on the 1:12 initiative proposed by the Young Socialists. This calls for the
highest salary to be restricted to twelve times the lowest salary in the same company. Is this an attack
on Switzerland’s model for success or an urgently needed top-down redistribution of wealth?
By Jürg Müller
It came as a real bombshell when the referendum result was announced on the
afternoon of 3 March 2013. Just under 68
percent of the Swiss people had voted in
favour of the fat-cat initiative, effectively declaring that they were no longer
willing to accept million-franc salaries
and bonuses. Business representatives in
particular were deeply shocked, among
them the Free Democrat National
Councillor Ruedi Noser from Zurich.
He painted a gloomy picture of the destruction of Switzerland’s model for success and without further ado established
the association “SuccèSuisse”. This aims
to protect the liberal economic system.
Noser’s alarmism is not without foundation. Left-wing parties have a whole
host of far-reaching salary and tax policy initiatives in the pipeline: the 1:12 initiative from the Young Socialists (Juso)
will be put to the vote on 24 November
2013. Further popular initiatives concerning the minimum wage, inheritance
tax and flat-rate taxation for wealthy
foreigners are also pending. This has not
all happened just by chance. What lies
behind it is a “strategic counter-project
to the neo-liberal discourse”, as Juso puts it.
National Councillor Noser describes it in different terms, accusing the left of “unadulterated class warfare”.
S w i ss R e v i e w October 2013 / No. 5
Photo: FTI
Heated debate over distribution of
wealth
The two political camps are only in agreement
on one point – a fierce debate over the distribution of wealth is taking place in Switzerland
in 2013. Arguments are being formulated, underpinned by statistics, which appear diametrically opposed depending on the benchmarks
used and the political background. Those on
the left point to a constantly widening gap in
terms of income and assets, while business federations and conservative parties claim the
opposite is true. “By international standards,
Switzerland is among the nations with the
1994, while the average salary has only
increased by around seven percent,”
writes “Denknetz”.
The economy as a “self-service
store”
HIgh earners out in the cold: The Young Socialists do
not shy away from condemning people like Brady Dougan, Daniel Vasella and Marcel Ospel, whom they see
as “fat cats”. They have been taken to court by Vasella.
smallest disparities in prosperity,” indicates
the liberal think-tank “Avenir Suisse” in summarising its findings.
The left-wing policy institute “Denknetz”
takes a different view, claiming that top earners have reaped greater and greater rewards
in recent years at the expense of the lower and
middle income brackets. Thirty years ago,
the earnings of a CEO were around six times
that of the average Swiss salary, while the ratio had grown to 1:13 by the end of the 1990s.
In 2007, the best-paid managers received 56
times the average salary. That also comes out
top internationally. However, it is not just the
top earners but also a broader spectrum of
high-wage recipients who have benefitted
from this redistribution. “The best-remunerated percentage of employees has seen salaries rise by over a third in real terms since
SP National Councillor Cédric Wermuth believes that “our economy has
turned into a veritable self-service store”.
The former Juso leader and intellectual
father of the 1:12 initiative estimates that
the number of salary millionaires has
more than quadrupled since 1997. Today,
one percent of the Swiss population possesses greater net assets than the remaining 99 percent put together.
“Avenir Suisse” has a completely different standpoint. It argues that wealth
is in fact broadly distributed in Switzerland. The nation is in the top third in
terms of income by international comparison while enjoying a very high level
of prosperity. And the income gap is not
widening, on the contrary: “Disparities
in income have actually declined in recent times. The proportion of top salaries is at the level of the 1960s while the
poverty rate has fallen slightly,” writes
the liberal think-tank in a brochure entitled
“Distribution”. If both the level of income and
the broad distribution among households are
taken into account, Switzerland occupies a top
position. “In no other OECD country (and
probably no other country in the world) are
full-time salaries distributed as equally as in
Switzerland.” Patrik Schellenbauer, the author
of the “Avenir Suisse” study, even suggests
that inequality in Switzerland has decreased
over the last three years: “What concerns me
is something else – the interventions in the labour market being called for (minimum salary, 1:12) risk biting the hand that feeds us.”
Switzerland on the way to becoming
the “North Korea of Europe”?
There is no need to go as far as FDP National Councillor Ruedi Noser, who be-
16
Politics
lieves Switzerland will go from being “the
most liberal economy in Europe” to the
“North Korea of Europe” if the initiative is
adopted. However, business representatives
are forming a broad front against the popular initiative. Valentin Vogt, President of
the Swiss Employers’ Association, estimates
that billions of Swiss francs will be lost in
tax revenues and social insurance contributions each year in the event of a yes vote.
Switzerland has lots of international companies in relation to its size: “If we want to
continue playing in this league, we must anticipate salaries of five to eight million Swiss
francs,” revealed Vogt in an interview with
the “SonntagsZeitung”.
Philipp Müller, President of the FDP-Liberals, also warns that the initiative constitutes “an incursion into economic freedom
that is incompatible with our principles” and
would have “a detrimental impact on the nation’s standing as a business location”. In
contrast, the left-wing “Denknetz” authors
Beat Ringger and Hans Baumann see no risk
of that happening and believe that Switzerland will remain an attractive location. Tax
benefits, well-qualified staff, first-rate academic and research institutions, political
stability, legal certainty, state and private
services that perform well, excellent transport and communications infrastructure
and proximity to the financial markets are
the factors that really guarantee a high level
of productivity, they say.
Hans-Jürg Fehr, former SP President
and National Councillor, believes that fatcat bonuses and top salaries are no longer
based on differences in performance levels but instead on the “power of a small, exclusive network of managers from the financial industry and other multinational
groups who are keeping a lid on one another’s sinecures”. This is why performance
differentials are no longer given as the reason for the enormous salaries but instead
competitive conditions on the international labour market are cited.
S w iss R e v i e w October 2013 / No. 5
Illu: TA-Grafik
Million-franc salaries are commonplace
However, million-franc salaries are not just
commonplace at major corporations, even
though the public are familiar with the
names of just a few fat-cats, such as the former Novartis CEO Daniel Vasella and
Brady Dougan, CEO of Credit Suisse. Even
“smaller” companies pay their chief executives and managers salaries in excess of a
million Swiss francs (see graphic on the
now Council of States member for Schaffhausen. The traditional left-right split did
right).
not therefore come into play. Vatter is “relBut why 1:12 of all numbers? And not 1:6
atively certain” that the old left-right divide
or 1:24? Concepts such as social justice, fair
will come to the fore again over the 1:12 inidistribution and acceptable salary levels are
difficult to define. Gerhard Schwarz, Direc- tiative, with the left supporting the proposal
and the conservative majority opposing it.
tor of “Avenir Suisse”, quite rightly points
Viewed from this perspective, the Young Soout: “The crux of the matter is that there are
no objective benchmarks for what is exces- cialists’ bill has much less chance of succeeding than the fat-cat initiative.
sive or inadequate in terms of income and
assets.” However, there are indicators, parjürg müller is an editor at “Swiss Review”
ticularly in a system of direct democracy, as
to what extent perceived or actual inequal- Information on the other votes from 24 November 2013: see see bottom of next page.
ities will be tolerated by the majority of the
population. The approval of the fat-cat inCompanies are far away from 1:12
itiative in March of this
year underlines that disEnterprise
Proportion
Lowest salary
Highest salary
in 2011
in 2012
tribution is no longer
just an issue for those on
59 000
13 900 000
Roche
236
1:
the left of politics; it is
also a concern for peo44 980
10 200 000
ABB
227
1:
ple in mainstream society.
The Swiss remain
business-friendly
However, Adrian Vatter,
Professor and Director
of the Institute of Political Science at the University of Berne, does
not believe a paradigm
shift is occurring. The
approval of the fat-cat
initiative “cannot be interpreted as an expression of general public
criticism of business”,
Vatter tells “Swiss Review”. The traditionally
rather business-friendly,
liberal outlook of the
Swiss is not a thing of
the past. The fat-cat initiative was in fact not
about a state solution
but essentially about
strengthening shareholder rights. Furthermore, the popular initiative was not submitted
by the left but by an individual campaigner
from the right-wing,
conservative camp,
Thomas Minder, who is
Novartis
59 000
1:
219
12 900 000
CS
50 000
1:
212
10 600 000
Nestlé
52 260
1:
188
9 800 000
UBS
50 000
1:
178
8 900 000
Lindt & Sprüngli
46 540
1:
148
6 900 000
Zürich Versicherungen 52 800
1:
144
7 600 000
Swatch
45 500
1:
136
6 200 000
Clariant
63 000
1:
95
6 000 000
Oerlikon
53 506
1:
88
4 700 000
Schindler
54 600
1:
73
4 000 000
Swiss Life
54 600
1:
62
3 400 000
Implenia
49 400
1:
40
1 970 000
Swisscom
45 500
1:
37
1 700 000
Post
44 823
1:
21
Migros
49 400
1:
17
TA-Diagram / Source: Travailsuisse (Salaries in CHF)
924 000 *
860 000 **
* 2011
** Angabe «Bilanz»
VOTING
17
Swiss people firmly behind compulsory military service
The proposal for voluntary military service put forward by the Group for a Switzerland without an Army (GSoA)
was heavily defeated in the referendum on 22 September.
By Jürg Müller
The army is too expensive and too large:
these were the arguments advanced by the
GSoA in its referendum campaign for the
abolition of compulsory military service.
The outcome was unequivocally clear with
over 73 percent of the electorate voting
against the proposal. This was despite the
fact that some figures in conservative and
liberal camps were also sympathetic towards
it. Reiner Eichenberger, an economics professor in Fribourg, for example, says that
general compulsory military service is becoming increasingly senseless from a military and economic perspective as the army
has significantly reduced its numbers in recent years. He also points out that a volunteer militia is an “essentially liberal idea”.
The proportion of No votes among the
Swiss abroad was over 9% lower than the Swiss
average. This was revealed by the analyses carried out by the nine cantons that list the votes
cast abroad separately.
The opponents of the popular initiative primarily argued that the abolition of compulsory military service would jeopardise national security. They also contended that the
rapid deployment of large numbers of soldiers
was vital in dealing with natural and manmade disasters and that the militia principle
was deeply embedded in all spheres of Swiss
society. Compulsory military service enabled
optimal use of the wealth of civil skills possessed by army members.
The referendum battle was remarkably dull.
The perception of the army has clearly become
more matter-of-fact. Even if the approach to
military issues is much less emotional than in
the past, the referendum result shows that the
army, compulsory military service and the militia principle are still deeply rooted in Switzerland. The “Group for a Switzerland without an
Army” also faces a day of reckoning itself. With
its programmatic name, it is not perceived as a
credible security policy organisation by many
people who share some of its concerns. Moreover, one of the arguments in support of compulsory military service, namely that a volunteer army would attract adventure-seekers,
Rambo types and right-wing extremists, has
also gained the support of many on the left.
Yes to law on epidemics and
petrol station shops
60 percent of voters approved the new Epidemics Act. This sets out the responsibilities
of federal government and the cantons more
clearly and provides better protection against
communicable diseases. Anti-vaccination
groups had called the referendum. The opponents of the liberalisation of opening hours for
petrol station shops also failed with their referendum. With just under 56 percent in favour
of liberalisation, employment law has been
amended accordingly. This will enable petrol
station shops on motorways to sell their full
range of goods throughout the night as well.
S wiss R e vi e w October 2013 / No. 5
Further referendum proposals to be put to the vote on 24 November 2013
Tax relief for families and a greater tax burden on motorists
The word “family” has a nice ring to it. The nucleus of society is
increasingly under threat but still a source of security and harmony that is worthy of protection. It comes as little surprise that
politicians are also focusing intensely on the family at the moment. An article, which sought to promote the reconciliation of
professional and family life, failed in March when it did not secure
the majority support of the cantons. Yet, an absolute flood of family initiatives from various parties is now set to be decided on at
referendum. The Swiss people will vote on the first of these, the
SVP’s family initiative, on 24 November.
There is not much family harmony to be found in politics at
the moment. Fierce rows over very different socio-political ideas
are highly prevalent. How much individual responsibility and
how much state support are appropriate with regard to childcare?
Who should primarily benefit from crèche places? Should politicians directly or indirectly encourage women to work?
These are also key issues in the SVP initiative entitled “tax relief
also for parents who look after their own children”. This intends to
enshrine in the constitution the right of parents who take care of
their children themselves to at least the same level of tax relief as
parents who leave their children with external childcare organisations. The cost of outside childcare has been tax-deductible since
2011. The SVP is now seeking tax relief for all families with children, no discrimination against families who look after their chil-
dren themselves and genuine freedom of choice and self-determination for families in terms of how they raise their children.
Opponents of the initiative claim that it violates the principle
of taxation based on economic capacity because households that
rely on external childcare, often through necessity, would be
worse off. They say that the SVP’s proposal will promote traditional family models through tax law – the father goes out to
work and the mother stays at home. There are also concerns over
huge tax shortfalls.
Dearer motorway tax disc
On 24 November, voting will also take place on increasing the
cost of the motorway tax disc from 40 to 100 Swiss francs. A
right-wing, conservative committee has called the referendum
against Parliament’s decision because it is opposed to “more and
more charges and taxes being levied at the expense of motorists”.
The left-leaning Swiss Transport Club (VCS) has also come out
against the increase, saying that the additional revenues will
only be used for the construction of new national roads, which
runs contrary to the objective of eco-friendly mobility. The Federal Council and Parliament justify the increase by claiming that
the revenues are required for the operation, maintenance and expansion of the national road network. The price of the tax disc is
still the same as it was 20 years ago as it has never been adjusted
in line with inflation.
18
C u lt u r e
The engaged observer
René Burri, born in Switzerland but well-travelled throughout the world, is one of the leading reportage
photographers of our time. We pay homage to an octogenarian who has remained young at heart.
By Manfred Papst
It is 20 November 1946. Winston Churchill is making a state visit to
Zurich. He is being driven through the city in an open-top car. He
is sitting in the back of the vehicle wearing a hat and overcoat. With
his famously sceptical expression, he is observing the curious onlookers on the Bürkliplatz. One of them is thirteen-year-old René Burri,
the son of a chef who has not only brought the unfamiliar taste of
lobster, oysters and other exotic seafood to the city on the Limmat
but has a passion for music and photography as well. He sent the
young boy off with the camera: “An important man is visiting Zurich. You have to be there.”
René Burri has often recounted this anecdote, and none of his biographers has omitted the tale. It marks the beginning of a lifelong
passion for his profession as a reportage photographer in the right
place at the right time, and it is just as much part of the Burri legend
as his most famous photograph – Che Guevara in Havana in 1962.
The nonchalant, self-assured army commander with cigar in mouth
became one of the century’s iconic images. The Beat Generation reproduced the portrait thousands of times even if it was not quite as
famous as the Che portrait by the Cuban photographer Alberto
Korda, taken two years earlier, which appeared on countless T-shirts,
posters, cups and emblems. The youth of 1968 celebrated the revolutionary like a pop star. Everyone is therefore familiar with Burri’s
photograph, even if they have never heard of the socialist experiment
in Latin America or the Swiss photographer himself.
World-famous portraits
Reality and dreams
Observing not just this classic photograph but the whole series that
Burri took at the time is very enlightening. It reveals how the por-
But even when Burri is photographing buildings and landscapes instead of people, he demonstrates this enigmatic ability to involve
Le Corbusier in his studio in Paris in 1960
and the famous photograph in front of the
Ronchamp chapel, which he designed
S w i ss R e v i e w October 2013 / No. 5
Photos: Magnum
traitist approaches his subject, wins his trust or at least stimulates
his interest, captures dynamism in his photographs and creates a
mood that enables a precise and expressive portrait with a depth of
focus to be taken from close-up. Producing such masterful photography as that of René Burri cannot be achieved with a cold remoteness but instead requires an approach based on empathy, curiosity
and even love. This is illustrated by Burri’s portraits of Che Guevara
as well as those of Le Corbusier, Alberto Giacometti, Yves Klein,
Maria Callas and Pablo Picasso, whose Milan retrospective in 1953
bowled him over and whom he accompanied to a bullfight in Nîmes
in 1958, in addition to those of many other nameless people going
about their everyday work.
The Swiss photographer accompanied Le Corbusier discreetly but
persistently for years. Three thousand negatives pay testament to
that. He would otherwise never have been able to take the epochal
portrait of the young woman on the Second Sunday of Easter in front
of the famous chapel of Ronchamp, among hundreds of other photographs. But Burri also sometimes takes advantage of opportune
moments. Nothing exemplifies this better than a snapshot taken in
Havana in 1993. A young man wearing black trousers and a white
shirt cycles through the city. His girlfriend is sitting on the bicycle
rack. She gives the photographer a beaming smile and indicates something to him with an intricate gesture that probably only he could
understand.
19
himself in his work. It is extraordinary that the artist kept back some
of his best photographs and only released them later, including work
featured in the 2011 issue of the culture magazine “Du” dedicated to
him.
By his own admission, René Burri has always been a very visual
person. He drew a lot as a child, became a passionate film buff as a
teenager and enrolled at the School of Applied Arts. There, the photography course was the closest match for his dreams. But reality was
different back then. Like the two legendary Swiss photographers,
Werner Bischof and Ernst Scheidegger, Burri attended the classes of
the austere object photographer Hans Finsler. He learned his trade
thoroughly, for which he later had reason to be grateful. But at the
time, the meticulous lighting of still life and photography of such
spectacular subjects as hen’s eggs and pans was not exactly what the
young man had been dreaming of.
dream career! The young Swiss toured the Suez Canal, the Mekong
Delta and Israel, but also documented the reconstruction of Germany after the Second World War – a subject of great interest to him
Working for the Magnum agency
In the end, Paris and not Zurich was to be the centre of Burri’s
life. The metropolis on the Seine became his great love and destiny. Life was vibrant here, and literature and art flourished. There
was something extraordinary to capture with the camera all the
time. In 1956, Burri began his collaboration with the famous Magnum agency founded in 1947 by Robert Capa, David Seymour,
Henri Cartier-Bresson and others. He had been taken there by his
former colleague Werner Bischof (1916–1954). By 1959, Burri had
become a fully-fledged member of Magnum at the age of 26. In
1963, he married Rosselina, Werner Bischof ’s widow, who worked
on the international photography scene herself. He had two children by her, and his second wife, Clotilde Blanc, bore him a third
child.
Paris was one of Burri’s great passions; the other was travel. David
Seymour and Henri Cartier-Bresson took him under their wing at
Magnum. They sent him on great journeys with editorial journalists.
Burri’s photographs soon appeared in Europe’s leading magazines. A
From the Brasilia series: a family on
the opening day in 1960 and an architectural photograph from 1997
20
C u lt u r e
as his mother was German. His study “Die Deutschen” (The Germans), which first appeared in 1962 and was later significantly extended, became a standard reference.
Brasilia – a long-term project
From the early 1960s, Burri travelled all over the world with his Leica
cameras visiting Latin America, the USA, Japan and China, southeast Asia and Canada, as well as Africa. He became a tireless citizen
of the world. One of his special areas of interest was the megalopolis of Brasilia. He dedicated a fascinating long-term project to the
new city, covering the period from 1958 to 1997. It is intriguing to
note how Burri followed the bizarre urban project of the architect
Oscar Niemeyer. Before that, in 1958, he had devoted a photo-reportage to the gauchos in Argentina, which we still find spellbind-
S w i ss R e v i e w October 2013 / No. 5
Photos: Magnum
Impressions from Cuba: a couple on a
­bicycle on the Malecón in 1993 and Che
Guevara as Minister of Industry in 1963
ing today. Why? Because Burri’s best photographs are always symbolic. They do not just depict a moment but interpret a society and
an era. They often emerge because the photographer does not concentrate on the subject of general interest but instead displays the
courage to turn, look around and focus on seemingly minor elements
in proceedings.
As a photographer, Burri has developed a highly personalised style
where precision and empathy, proximity and distance, an instinct for
melancholic charm and situational comedy come together. However,
he is certainly not in thrall to his own achievements and convictions.
He says he is no “Burrist”, coining this nice word-play himself. Many
others have attempted to imitate him, but he is always one step ahead.
He has dealt with the transition from analogue to digital photography effortlessly and although he established himself early on as a
1957: Picasso in the studio at his home in Cannes
and giving an art lesson to his children Paloma
and Claude and two friends
21
classicist of black-and-white photography, he has also masterfully
conquered the world of colour, partly because this was required by
clients such as “Life”, “Look”, “Stern” and “Paris Match”, but also
because he is interested in experimenting. For decades he has always
carried at least two cameras around his neck. This year, his dual talent was on display in an exhibition at Zurich’s Museum of Design. It
was entitled “A Double Life”, alluding to an embarrassment of riches
and not to a dichotomy.
In his colour photography, Burri is free, playful and audacious. He
casts off the constraining demands of his black-and-white world. He
did so in 1957 when his first colour reportage was published in “Du”.
Burri plays with perspective, detail and background. Nothing is
firmly defined any longer. This irritated some of his critics. They
missed the familiar cohesion.
Rio de Janeiro in 1960:
the Ministry of Health
designed by the architect
Oscar Niemeyer
Burri also recognised the historicity of his medium at an early stage.
He attentively observed the development of cinema and television.
It was apparent to him as early as the 1960s that photography as he
practised it belonged to the world of yesterday – digitisation or not.
But he also saw its unique qualities – the ability to capture moments
and expand upon them in a context of fleetingness and superficiality.
Charming, self-assured and amiable
A René Burri homage that just looked at his artistic talents but not
his personality would fall short of the mark. The grand seigneur
of Zurich is not just someone who disappears behind the camera
and triggers the shutter release. He’s a character of whom you
would wish a congenial photographer to take pictures: a dandy
dressed in a suit, hat and scarf, possibly also with a cigar; a flâneur
who is charming, self-assured, eloquent and quick-witted; a man
who knows and loves life. A cheerful, approachable person. Who
can blame him for his small vanities? He can also be extremely generous. He donated all the exhibits in the show to the Museum of
Design in Zurich, the former School of Applied Arts where his career began.
Manfred PaPst heads the culture section at the “NZZ am Sonntag”.
René Burri
René Burri was born in Zurich on 9 April 1933. He has
belonged to the elite in his
profession since 1959 as a
permanent member of the
Magnum agency. He obtained global fame with his
black-and-white reportage
and portrait photographs but
has also excelled at colour
photography. He has never
perceived himself purely as
an artist. As a photo journalist and witness of the times,
he has produced an oeuvre of
lasting significance. Numerous publications and exhibitions document his work.
22
Sport
Swiss national team on the way to the Olympic Games
The Swiss national ice hockey team will fly out to the Winter Olympic Games, which will take
place in Sochi between 7 and 23 February, having finished runners-up at the World Championships.
We look back at the Ice Hockey World Championships last May with team coach Sean Simpson.
By Alain Wey
S w i ss R e v i e w October 2013 / No. 5
Photos: freshfocus
The Swiss national team in action at the World Championships in Sweden:
Nino Niederreiter (above) and Reto Suri, two of the goal scorers in the
semi-final against the USA
“Do you believe in miracles? Sometimes...”
This joke appeared on the website of the Ice
Hockey World Championships in Sweden
and Finland last May in relation to the silver
medal won by the Swiss national team. It was
undoubtedly an incredible achievement.
You have to go back decades to find similar
success. The national team won a silver
medal in 1935 and bronze in 1953. Their performance saw Sean Simpson’s team climb
three places in the world rankings of ice
hockey nations to seventh spot. The Swiss
national team’s Canadian coach believes the
final defeat by Sweden (5:1) could also have
ended differently. Prior to the World Championships in Scandinavia, most experts predicted that Switzerland would not even
reach the quarter-finals. However, Simpson
Goaltender Reto Berra and Roman Josi in the match against Belarus (above);
Rafael Diaz, Nino Niederreiter and Denis Hollenstein celebrate after the
semi-final against the USA
is keeping his feet on the ground and has realistic expectations for the Winter Olympic
Games in Sochi in February and the World
Championships in the Belarusian city of
Minsk in May 2014. His goal is to reach the
quarter-finals.
The right chemistry
The Swiss team played with a complete lack
of confidence at the 2011 and 2012 World
Championships. They did not even make the
quarter-finals. At the start of the 2013
World Championships the team was expected to show greater self-belief but many
questions remained unanswered. Simpson
selected seven new players for the team who
had never taken part in a World Championships before. He relied on a combination of
youth and experience. However, the team
had to cope without key players like Julien
Sprunger and Goran Bezina. The Swiss
looked extremely weak compared with the
titans in Group A, which included Sweden
(4), the Czech Republic (3) and Canada (5).
But, to everyone’s surprise, Simpson’s men
first overcame Sweden, then Canada and finally the Czech Republic. They held their
lead against four other opponents and finished the stage top of the group. It was a dizzying series of results.
The Swiss faced the Czechs again in the
quarter-finals and unexpectedly reached the
semi-finals, where they played the USA. The
Americans had trounced Russia, the reigning
world champions, by 8 goals to 3. The Swiss
therefore feared the worst.
23
But the incredible run was not over yet.
Goaltender Reto Berra, who plays for the
Calgary Flames in the National Hockey
League (NHL), defended superbly well on
the ice and did not concede a goal. The Swiss
ran out 3:0 winners with goals from Nino
Niederreiter and two of the new faces, Julian Walker and Reto Suri. The Swiss secured their first silver medal in 78 years and
met the Swedes, who they had previously
beaten 3:2, again in the final. This time,
however, Simpson’s men had no chance
against Sweden, losing 5:1. This meant Switzerland finished World Championship runners-up, an incredible achievement that nobody had expected and which underlined
how well Sean Simpson has performed over
the past three years.
The players received a hero’s welcome on
their return to Zurich on 20 May. The Canadian coach nevertheless immediately
warned against too high hopes during the
2013-2014 season. Anticipating such success
Encounters on the ice
n Tournaments in 2013. Switzerland will meet the United States, Slovakia and Germany
at the Deutschland Cup in Munich in November 2013. Belarus, Slovakia and Norway will
take part in the Arosa Challenge – the national team’s home tournament – in December
2013.
n 2014 Winter Olympic Games in Sochi. Switzerland will face Sweden (1), the Czech Republic (4) and Latvia (11) in Group C between 12 and 23 February 2014. The three group
winners (A, B, C) and the best second-placed team will qualify automatically for the
quarter-finals. The eight remaining teams will play off in an elimination round for a
quarter-final place.
n World Championships in Minsk, Belarus. Switzerland will play against Finland, Russia,
the United States, Germany, Latvia, Belarus and Kazakhstan in Group B between 9 and 25
May 2014. The top four teams in each group (A and B) will qualify for the quarter-finals.
every year would be unrealistic. The silver
medal should not place a burden of expectation on the players who needed to stay realistic, he said.
Switzerland can certainly look forward to
the Olympic Games in Russia. However, a degree of trepidation is also in order as Switzerland will once again encounter the world
champions, Sweden. Dreams are part of sport,
S w i ss R e v i e w October 2013 / No. 5
Photo: Joel Marklund/Bildbyran/freshfocus
“We won silver
rather than lost gold”
as illustrated by the film “Miracle” about the
US ice hockey team’s sensational victory at
the 1980 Winter Olympic Games. But
dreams can only be achieved on the back of
hard work.
www.swiss-icehockey.ch
Alain Wey is an editor at “Swiss Review”
are all in the same boat. The emphasis was previously placed primarily on the senior team, while less importance was attached to
emerging talent. Today, the national teams at all age levels are regarded as important in Swiss ice hockey.
The 53-year-old Canadian Sean Simpson has been coach of the
Swiss national team since 2010. After beginning his coaching career in 1997, he won the Swiss title with EV Zug at the first attempt. In 2008, he took over as coach of the ZSC Lions, who became Swiss champions under him. Following the Lions’ victories
over Metallurg Magnitogorsk in the Champions Hockey League
in Europe and over the Chicago Blackhawks in the Victoria Cup,
he gained a reputation as a world-class coach.
What are the Swiss team’s major strengths?
A silver medal at the World Championships is no mean feat. The
team has to be very solid in all positions on the ice. The goaltender
and the defence must be outstanding. That’s the key thing. We have
a very good system and displayed the courage to impose our will. The
chemistry in the camp is our major asset. And we scored lots of goals,
something we have failed to do in the past.
How has the team developed since you took over as coach?
We have worked extremely hard. The appointment of a new coach
in 2010 meant a new era for the team. It took a while for everything
to click. My predecessor, Ralph Krueger, had coached the team for
13 years (1998-2010). I had my own connections and my own ideas ...
Winning people over was not always easy. Our silver medal is not just
down to the work we put in last season but to what we have done over
the past three years.
Let’s take a look at the future. What position in the world rankings do
you hope to achieve with this team in two years’ time?
The question as to whether we can repeat our medal success is
irrelevant at the moment. Our goal for 2014 is to reach the
­quarter-finals. We cannot expect to win silver or even gold
medals every year. We are not the best ice hockey nation in the
world, and if that were our goal then this silver medal would represent failure.
You were also coach of the Swiss Under-20s team in the
2012-2013 season. Did this prove beneficial to you as
coach of the senior team?
It was extremely advantageous. I had also been an
advisor to the U20s for a few years prior to that. I
know the young players very well. We play with the
same system. The approach with the national teams
is now very similar irrespective of whether it is the
senior team, the U20s or younger age groups. We
When you reflect on your achievement at the World
Championships, how did it make you feel?
It was a sensational experience for the national
team – the players and the management. We proved
that a very good standard of ice hockey is played in
Switzerland with good players and good coaches. For
me, the question is now how we deal with that. We
cannot allow success to go to our heads. We have to
keep our feet on the ground.
24
Lite r atu r e
Between two worlds: books and literary figures among the Swiss abroad
By Charles Linsmayer
The old warhorse and conman served in many armies of the world and
his memoirs are legendary – Hans Ormund Bringolf
The provision of mercenaries – something in which Switzerland had
specialised for centuries – reached an absurd but literarily important pinnacle in the 20th century in Hans Ormund Bringolf. Born
on 11 January 1876 in Baden-Baden, the son of a businessman from
Schaffhausen and a Russian mother, he sat his school-leaving examination in Neuchâtel, studied in Innsbruck, Vienna and Berlin, and
obtained his doctorate in law in Greifswald at the age of 22, thanks
to the wealth of his by then deceased father – he was well known as
the heavy-drinking and hardy but equally profligate son of a millionaire. However, his heart was set on a career in the military. As a
cavalryman in the Swiss army he was nicknamed “Leutnant Bringolf selig” (Lieutenant Bringolf deceased) because he charged into
everything and was declared shot dead
hundreds of times after every patrol.
S w iss R e v ie w October 2013 / No. 5
Photo: donated
He fed steak to the horses
In 1900, Bringolf joined the diplomatic
service as a military attaché in Berlin
and Vienna. However, his extravagant
lifestyle – he held banquets for hundreds of guests, had soup served in gold
plated dishes and fed the horses steak –
brought him to ruin, which he dealt
with by illegitimate means. In 1904, after his ostentatious marriage to a factory owner’s daughter, he was exposed
as a counterfeiter of cheques, fled to
Mexico and made his way through
South America dodging bills. He finally
embarked upon a career in the US army
and took over the command of Negros,
an island of the Philippines, as a Constable Officer. However, he was dismissed due to his excessively intense
drills. His next stops were Paraguay and
Brazil. Having now descended to cleaning shoes, he happened upon the idea as
“Legation Councillor Dinichert” of appointing honorary consuls all over the
place on behalf of the Department of
Foreign Affairs, holding grandiose
feasts and sending the bills to Berne.
After being exposed by a fellow countryman, he spent two years in jail in
Lima. On his return to Europe, he went
on a tour of luxury hotels in Germany
as “Baron von Tscharner”, for which he spent another two years behind bars in Mannheim.
Career pinnacle – 1914 to 1924
The First World War saw him granted parole. Bringolf became a captain in the foreign legion and obtained such notoriety as the courageous “Lion of Monastir” that he was awarded the Cross of the French
Legion of Honour in 1924. At that time he had regained his authority
and dignity, having been appointed director of Alsatian coal supply. But,
as ever, no sooner had he managed to get his head above water than he
suffered a setback. This time it was at the hands of the “Schaffhauser
AZ” newspaper, which exposed him as a convict, and he was dealt a decisive blow when this appeared in the
“Humanité”. After a final attempt as a
coal agent in Belgrade he gave up and
wrote the “Lebensroman des Leutnant
Bringolf selig” in the poorhouse in Hallau.
This was published in 1927 in Zurich. It
did not sugar-coat his life but it did reveal an original narrative talent.
In 1930, when the Parisian “Éditions
Au Sans pareil” launched its outsider series “Les têtes brûlées”, volume 1 was the
exact same book, published under the title “Feu le Lieutenant Bringolf: Quelques
fragments de ses Mémoires”, with whose
swashbuckling author the editor of the series, Blaise Cendrars, felt an inner kinship.
However, he took the word “deceased”
literally and believed the author to be
dead. That was certainly not the case as
in 1940, when Finland was recruiting volQuotation:
unteers in Tornio, Bringolf found himself
“What attracted me to the cavalry was not the
back on the battlefield. He affirmed that
riding or the military involvement but instead
he would join the US army if he were not
the pleasure of wearing an immaculate uniform
wanted. “Despite being 66 years of age I
and owning horses and magnificent horse tack.
have no doubts that I could make another
For me, being a soldier began after evening roll
modest contribution to world events,” he
call when you could visit the dining room of a
wrote. However, he was not involved in
Bernerhof or the railway restaurant with a
any further military engagements and
7-cm-high collar and clink the extra-large spur
died a civilian death in Hallau on 4 March
rowels.” (“Der Lebensroman des Leutnant
1951, leaving behind an estate of 2 francs
Bringolf selig”, Jean Frey, Zurich 1927)
and 75 cents. Wreaths were sent by the
BibliographY: “Der Lebensroman des Leutnant
French and Finnish armies.
Bringolf selig”, published in 1927 in German, in
1930 in French and in 1931 in English under the
title “I Have No Regrets; The Strange Life of a
Diplomat-Vagrant, Being the Memoirs of Lieutenant Bringolf”, is only available from second-hand
bookshops.
CHARLES LINSMAYER is a literary scholar
and journalist in Zurich
O r g a n i s at i o n o f t h e s w i s s a b r o a d
OSA advice
S w i ss R e v i e w October 2013 / No. 5
Photo: OSA
What is Switzerland’s position on multiple nationalities? What consequences
does dual citizenship have?
Over 70% of all Swiss abroad have another
nationality in addition to Swiss citizenship.
Switzerland has unrestrictedly recognised
multiple citizenships since 1992. Swiss citizens do not therefore have to relinquish
their Swiss citizenship if they apply for
the nationality of another country unless
this is stipulated by the law of their other
country. Not all countries recognise
dual citizenship. It is therefore advisable
to ask the authorities in the country where
nationality is enjoyed about the consequences before obtaining another nationality.
Dual citizenship has various consequences for the Swiss abroad. The welfare
institutions, for example, only generally assume responsibility for persons with dual
citizenship if they can prove that their
Swiss citizenship is of primary importance.
This means that they must have a closer relationship with Switzerland than with their
other country. The country to which persons with multiple nationalities have the
strongest relationship is also responsible
for diplomatic protection. If such persons
reside in their other country, Switzerland
cannot intervene on their behalf. However,
the consular and diplomatic representations can take action in cases of serious and
repeated infringements of international
law (e.g. violations of the ban on torture).
Swiss abroad with multiple citizenships are
generally exempted from compulsory military service by Switzerland if they have
carried out their military service in their
other country or have performed alternative civilian service. This is without prejudice to the obligation to pay the military
service exemption tax. Swiss abroad with
dual citizenship who have also taken the
nationality of their country of residence
cannot voluntarily perform their military
service in Switzerland unless the compulsory military service agreement between
Switzerland and other countries stipulates
otherwise. Dual citizenship can also have
implications under civil law. Swiss abroad
can, for example, decide by will that their
inheritance matters will be governed by
Swiss law. This is, of course, subject to rec-
ognition of this decision by their other
country, which is often also their country
of residence.
Sarah Mastantuoni, Head of the Legal
Department
OSA’s Legal Department provides general legal information on Swiss law and specifically in areas that
concern the Swiss abroad. It does not provide information on foreign law and does not intervene in disputes between private parties.
Holiday adventures
and educational
visits for young
Swiss abroad
Over 200 young Swiss abroad enjoyed
an exciting stay in their second homeland this summer. The visitors gained
broad insights into Switzerland, established contacts with Swiss people living in Switzerland and abroad, and
took lots of memories home. OSA’s
Youth Service is looking forward to
welcoming old and new faces to the
forthcoming winter programmes.
Register now for OSA’s winter offers!
OSA’s Youth Service wants to help even
more young people create memories of Switzerland. The 2013/14 winter programme will
provide youngsters with opportunities to
practise winter sports at various holiday regions in Switzerland, to improve their
knowledge with a language course or to enjoy a visit tailored to individual requirements with one of OSA’s offers for young
people.
Discover Switzerland (aged 16 and above)
Young people will explore Switzerland for
two weeks. They will stay with host families
and choose trips suggested by OSA.
25
Training in Switzerland
(aged 16 and above)
During a two-week visit, OSA will arrange
for young people to visit educational institutions to help them achieve their career
ambitions. The participants will receive extensive advice on educational opportunities
and meet students from the disciplines concerned. They will stay with host families
during their visit.
New Year’s ski camp in Lantsch/Lenzerheide (Grisons) (15 to 25-year-olds)
The traditional winter sports camp for
young Swiss abroad will take place in
Grisons from 26 December 2013 to 4 January 2014.
The language courses will take place in
Berne and Fribourg from 6 January to
17 January 2014.
Winter sports week in Davos (Grisons)
(aged 18 and above)
29 March 2014 to 5 April 2014
A programme for young adults in the famous
winter sports resort of Davos.
Right across Switzerland
(aged 14 and above)
19 April 2014 to 26 April 2014
An exciting journey through Switzerland
with lots of places of interest and highlights.
Information on the programmes for
young people can be found in the “Offers”
section at www.aso.ch.
Organisation of the Swiss Abroad
Tel: +41 31 356 61 00
[email protected], www.aso.ch
Seminar on the Federal
Youth Session
Are you a young Swiss person abroad aged
between 14 and 21, do you speak a national language and are you interested in
social or political issues?
Register now for the one-week political
seminar organised by OSA (from 11 to 17
November 2013) and then take part in the
Federal Youth Session! Together with 200
young people from Switzerland, you will
have the opportunity to express your political views in the Federal Palace and to
influence politics in Switzerland. Young
Swiss people have had a powerful voice
for over 20 years thanks to the Youth
­Session.
26
O r g a n i s at i o n o f t h e s w i s s a b r o a d
The Swiss abroad, globalisation
and the Federal Councillor
This year’s Congress of the Swiss Abroad was a resounding
success. The topic of “Switzerland and globalisation” generated great interest, as did the visit and speech by Federal
Councillor Eveline Widmer-Schlumpf.
Around 400 Swiss from Switzerland and abroad attended the 91st
Congress of the Swiss Abroad in Davos between 16 and 18 August.
The highlight was the plenary session with several votes on globalisation and on the opportunities and risks that this presents for Switzerland.
Meeting of the Council of
the Swiss Abroad
As usual, the Council of the Swiss Abroad
(CSA) met in Davos on the day before the
congress. The Council was reconstituted as
its members all over the world had been
newly elected for the 2013-2017 term of
office in recent months. Filippo Lombardi,
a CVP Council of States member from Ticino, and Irène Beutler-Fauguel, a representative of the Swiss in Italy, were
elected as new members of OSA’s Executive
Board. Jean-Paul Aeschlimann stood down
from the Executive Board. His Executive
Board seat, which is reserved for the Swiss
“Globalisation is neither good nor bad,” remarked Federal Councillor Eveline Widmer-Schlumpf in her speech on the Saturday afternoon. “Globalisation presents opportunities and risks. It is a matter
of deciding how to take advantage of the opportunities and to minimise the risks.” Minimising risks is a current focus for Switzerland
primarily because of its financial centre, the Federal Councillor emphasised, as Switzerland is by far the most important location for
cross-border asset management. Swiss financial institutions manage
around 2,100 billion US dollars in foreign assets. (The full speech
can be found at www.efd.admin.ch > press releases and speeches)
After appearing at the plenary session, the Federal Councillor met
young Swiss abroad taking part in a project week organised by OSA’s
Youth Service as part of the congress. The youngsters revealed that
the meeting with Eveline Widmer-Schlumpf, from which journalists were excluded, was very animated and humorous at times, while
critical views were also expressed.
During the plenary question-and-answer session, those attending mainly focused on the new tax agreement between France and
Switzerland which foresees a high level of taxation of inheritances
in Switzerland and applies to French citizens and Swiss citizens living in France (see also the box on the CSA). Federal Councillor Widmer-Schlumpf expressed the view that an unregulated situation
would be even more disadvantageous than the agreement sought by
France. (BE)
community living in France, will not be
occupied until the next CSA ­meeting in
March.
Michel Duclos, the French ambassador
to Berne, attended the Council’s meeting
as a guest. He comprehensively set out
the position of the French government in
the row over a new inheritance tax
­agreement with Switzerland. In a nutshell, he explained that as France has
terminated the old agreement, Switzerland only has two options. Either it can
accept France’s proposal for a new
­agreement or an unregulated situation
will prevail. Ambassador Duclos said that
the proposed agreement was clearly a better option than no agreement at all. This
opinion is also shared by the Federal
Council, which has already signed the
agreement. However, it has yet to be ratified by Parliament.
Finally, the Council unanimously
adopted OSA’s position statement for the
consultation procedure on the new Swiss
Abroad Act. This is set to be discussed by
the Swiss Parliament this year.
The names of all members of the Council
of the Swiss Abroad are published on OSA’s
website. www.aso.ch > Politics > Council of
the Swiss Abroad > Members (BE)
S w i ss R e v i e w October 2013 / No. 5
Photo: OSA
Services provided by OSA
The Organisation of the Swiss
Abroad (OSA), a foundation
governed by private law, is
a centre of expertise for safeguarding the interests of
Swiss citizens living abroad.
Besides the publication of
“Swiss Review”, it provides
­v arious services for Swiss
­c itizens abroad in collabo
ration with its partner orga­
nisations.
n Legal
advice. Free advice on
emigrating abroad and returning to Switzerland.
www.aso.ch – “Consultation”
section
n Offers for children and
young people. Organisation of
holiday camps and language
courses, etc. for young Swiss
abroad seeking a better understanding of their native country.
www.aso.ch – “Offers” section
n Advice
on education and
training in Switzerland. Young
Swiss abroad wishing to train or
study in Switzerland receive
support and guidance in selecting training and educational opportunities and making grant
applications.
www.aso.ch – “Consultation”
section
n Network. The website SwissCommunity.org provides the op-
portunity to network with Swiss
citizens all over the world.
www.swisscommunity.org
Organisation of the
Swiss Abroad (OSA)
Alpenstrasse 26,
3006 Berne, SWITZERLAND
Tel. +41 31 356 61 00
[email protected]
Notes from parliament
27
To the frontiers –
and beyond!
Trans-frontier cooperation with partner authorities is also vital to combat cross-border
criminality.
Criminality, organised smuggling and
illegal immigration are presenting huge
challenges for society and the state.
Trafficking in people, drugs and weapons, money laundering and criminal
tourism pose a threat to the security
and wellbeing of the population and
have a detrimental impact on Switzerland as a location for business. The
2,000-strong Swiss Border Guard unit –
the armed and uniformed division of
the Swiss Customs Administration – is
defying these threats.
Joining the border guards
Prospective border guards undertake a rigorous three-year training period with a
modular structure to prepare them for their
tasks. The theoretical part of the training
takes place at the Swiss Customs Administration’s training centre in Liestal (canton of
Basel-Land). The practical training is carried out in a region to which the aspiring
border guards are assigned.
The basic training in the first year consists of theoretical modules and practical
Our borders are busy places – every day
around 700,000 people, 350,000 cars and
20,000 heavy goods vehicles cross Switzerland’s approximately 2,000 km long border.
Federal government received 65 million
Swiss francs every day from customs duties
in 2012. These revenues are required by the
state to perform its duties on behalf of the
Swiss people. On an average day the border
guards detect 55 legal offences, arrest 37
wanted persons, uncover 39 violations of the
Asylum Act and Aliens Act, seize three kilos of narcotic substances and confiscate five
falsified documents.
S w i ss R e v i e w October 2013 / No. 5
Photo: EDA
Protecting the economy, security
and wellbeing
The border guards are deployed around the
clock on our borders, in the border regions,
on boundary waters, on international rail
services, at airports and also abroad to protect Switzerland and its inhabitants. They
perform security policing, customs and immigration duties. This diversity makes their
role an exciting one. Dealing with a wide
range of different people and cultures presents great challenges for the border guards.
Carrying out checks on people always involves encroaching upon privacy and requires the ability to “make judgements,
reach decisions and react appropriately”.
Specialist expertise and an insight into human nature are needed. The border guards
must be physically and mentally fit. A career
in the Swiss Border Guard unit can quite literally take you to the frontiers and beyond,
since the border guards are also deployed
abroad in, for example, operations involving
Frontex, the European border agency.
Specialist and management careers
To enable its employees to fulfil their potential, the Swiss Border Guard unit provides
them with the opportunity to specialise in
handling guard dogs as well as narcotics and
explosives detection dogs or to focus on, for
example, document forgeries, vehicle
checks, narcotic substance analyses or x-raying of baggage and other items. Border
guards are also prepared for deployment
abroad on security missions concerning civil
aviation (air/ground marshals).
Employees with exceptional management
and organisational skills can pursue career
opportunities as head of operations, head of
team or unit, head of service or as officer.
The management career path with management training at the Swiss Police Institute
and the Federal Training Centre paves the
way for sitting the “Higher Professional Examination”, an advanced vocational qualification at tertiary level.
Article by Staff-Adjutant Attila
Lardori of the Swiss Border Guard unit
Rigorous selection procedure
Anyone wishing to join the Swiss Border
Guard unit is subjected to a rigorous selection procedure. In addition to teamworking and communication skills, interpersonal skills, strong powers of
comprehension, independence, reliability,
assertiveness and perseverance, applicants must meet the following criteria:
deployment at the border. Highly experienced instructors provide the trainees with
support. The training period is just as diverse as the future role itself. Topics covered include border guard and customs service, law, criminalistics, searches, document
inspection, firearms training, security and
intervention methods, sport and psychosocial skills. Once the first year of service
has been completed successfully – including all modules and professional examinations – trainees take the “Swiss Federal
Border Guard Qualification” practical examination.
Trainees’ skill sets are further enhanced
in the second and third years of service with
advanced courses in search and rescue, document inspection, criminalistics, security
operations and operational tactics. The
training is completed once these modules
have been passed. Border guards can then
pursue the specialist and/or management career paths.
nSwiss citizenship or dual citizenship.
Dual citizens cannot have undertaken
military service abroad.
nPossession of a Swiss Certificate of
Competence following professional basic
training of at least three years’ duration
or an equivalent qualification (e.g. Swiss
university entrance qualification).
nAge between 20 and 35.
nMinimum height of 168 cm for male applicants and 160 cm for female applicants.
nClass B driving licence (vehicles with a
total weight of up to 3,500 kg and no more
than eight seats plus the driver’s seat).
Working in the Swiss Border Guard unit
requires a high degree of individual responsibility and offers many challenges
as well as training and development opportunities. It also provides progressive
working conditions and employee benefits in accordance with the Federal Personnel Act.
28
Notes from parliament
Swiss ImageAmbassadors
At the 91st Congress of the Swiss
Abroad in Davos, Federal Councillor
Eveline Widmer-Schlumpf emphasised
the vital contribution that the Swiss
abroad make to Switzerland’s positive
image: “Swiss citizens who settle
abroad become ambassadors for our nation.” Presence Switzerland asked two
Swiss abroad whether they actually see
themselves as ambassadors for Switzerland in their new countries.
Marc Andre Godat, IT consultant and
CSA delegate, in Australia since 1999:
S w i ss R e v i e w October 2013 / No. 5
Photo: donated
Do you see yourself as an ambassador promoting Switzerland’s image in your new country?
Yes, and that is certainly true for most of
the Swiss living here. The distance from
your native country is a major factor. Expats in Australia cannot simply return
home to Switzerland for a long weekend.
But as we still long for a raclette or fondue
or want to celebrate 1 August, we often do
so at club events. There is always an interesting dialogue with Australians and cultural exchange is quickly established.
What do you do on behalf of Switzerland?
On a public level, I was President of the
Swiss Society in Queensland for four years.
Our club’s mission to “preserve and promote
the Swiss heritage and goodwill between
Australia and Switzerland through social
and cultural activities” is put into practice at
every event. We now even have some Australian and international members of the
club. On a private level, I try to make our
Australian friends more familiar with Swiss
culture, but have failed to achieve much success with encouraging people to “look one
another in the eye” when making a toast.
How is Switzerland perceived in your country
of residence?
The general perception is of a nation of
banks, chocolate, high cost of living, cows
and “The Sound of Music”, while buzzwords like Xstrata, UBS, globalisation,
FIFA and neutrality also sometimes crop
up. Except for occasional articles on dubious banking practices or the questionable
activities of some major Swiss companies,
such as in the mining sector, the media do
not provide much coverage. There is much
greater interest in Germany, seen as the
powerhouse of Europe, and, of course, the
UK. Switzerland nevertheless enjoys a
very good reputation and is seen by many
Australians as a dream destination because
of its picture-postcard scenery.
Which aspects of Switzerland would you like
to raise the profile of?
First of all, I’d say tourism. Australians
who travel to Europe usually visit the UK,
France or Italy. Switzerland is left out as
it is often regarded as being too expensive
or exclusive. They do not realise that the
cost of renting a chalet in the Swiss mountains for a week is the same as a threenight stay in a hotel on the Gold Coast in
Queensland. Secondly, Switzerland is at
the forefront of innovation, research and
educational institutions. In the post-mining investment boom, Australia must rethink its strategy in order to open up new
markets. Training and development opportunities are vital and doors are opening here that could be attractive and lucrative for both countries.
What do you make of the “Heidi vs. high-tech”
slogan?
They are essentially two buzzwords that
are more powerful together than alone.
The Australians I know who have worked
in Switzerland and returned home would
go back in an instant. Perhaps the slogan
“high-tech Heidi” would be more fitting as
this is the combination that makes Switzerland such an attractive place to work. A
good salary and high standard of living appeal to the best minds in the world and this
is where Switzerland can come up trumps
– “game on”!
What role could the Swiss abroad play here?
Every expat is an ambassador and there
are plenty of Australians who enjoy trav-
elling and take an interest in different cultures. There are always situations in
which you have the opportunity to provide friends or anyone interested in an insight into life in Switzerland. Joining a
club is also beneficial. Swiss clubs have
much more to offer than fondue and “Jass”
evenings. They provide a platform for cultural exchange and a network for establishing social and professional relationships. Who can afford NOT to belong to
a network today?
Bianca Rubino, a student, has lived in
Italy since childhood:
Do you see yourself as an ambassador promoting Switzerland’s image in your new
country?
Born in the Bernese Seeland city of Biel,
I have always seen myself as an ambassador
and promoter for Switzerland. I’d say, above
all, at the places where I live and study – Trapani and Modena in Italy, but also in the
Netherlands, France and Spain, where I have
enhanced my knowledge in “European studies”.
What do you do on behalf
of Switzerland?
I often speak to my Italian friends about
Switzerland and give them an idea of what
our country is like beyond the obvious clichés, even if raclette evenings have been a
standard at home for years. I speak with
other Swiss in dialect at the events held by
the Swiss Club in Sicily and am president of
the Youth Committee of the Umbrella Organisation of the Swiss Societies in Italy. We
organise events and encourage young Swiss
abroad, mainly via social media, to attend
the congress of the Umbrella Organisation
in Italy.
29
How is Switzerland perceived in your country
of residence?
Italians mainly regard Switzerland as a
neighbouring country characterised by its
financial centre and exclusive ski resorts.
Besides economic policy issues, they primarily focus on tourism, including Switzerland’s natural beauty and its “Heidi image”, as well as the culinary clichés of
chocolate and cheese with holes in it. Swiss
technology is also widely known thanks to
the expression “as accurate as a Swiss
watch”.
Which aspects of Switzerland would you like
to raise the profile of?
Switzerland possesses many assets in
terms of its political and democratic system
and its four national languages make it an
extraordinary place. I have always been fascinated by these aspects and believe they
should be marketed more effectively. Our
linguistic diversity pays testimony to coexistence on an administrative and day-today basis, even in smaller bilingual towns
like Biel, while it also reflects Switzerland’s
cultural wealth.
Travel advice
Phone from Switzerland: 0800 24-7-365
Phone from abroad: +41 800 24-7-365
E-Mail: [email protected]
Skype: helpline-eda
Important notice
Notify your embassy or consulate general of
your email address and mobile phone number or any changes to them.
Register at www.swissabroad.ch to ensure
you do not miss any communications (“Swiss
Review”, newsletters from your representation, etc.).
www.eda.admin.ch/reisehinweise
Helpline DFAE: +41 (0)800 24-7-365
www.twitter.com/travel_edadfae
The latest “Swiss Review” and previous issues can be read and/or printed out at any
time at www.revue.ch. “Swiss Review”
(and “Gazzetta Svizzera” in Italy) is sent
to all Swiss households abroad registered
with an embassy or consulate general free
of charge either electronically (via email or
as an iPad/Android app) or in printed format.
Elections and referenda
Three proposals will be put to the vote on 24 November 2013:
initiative “1:12 – for fair pay”
nPopular initiative “Family initiative: tax relief also for parents who look after their
own children”
nAmendment of 22 March 2013 to the Federal Act on Tax for the Use of the National
Road System (Nationalstrassenabgabegesetz, NSAG)
All information on the proposals (voting pamphlet, committees, party statements,
electronic voting, etc.) can be found at www.ch.ch/abstimmungen.
2014 referendum dates: 9 February; 18 May; 28 September; 30 November.
nPopular
What do you make of the “Heidi vs. high-tech”
slogan?
In my view, Switzerland is strongly attached to its traditions, landscapes and natural environment – mountains, lakes,
meadows – in other words, everything associated with “Heidi”. But Switzerland is
also a high-tech country. The two concepts
should not be seen as contradictory, therefore, but instead as complementary and
mutually compatible.
S wiss R eview October 2013 / No. 5
Photo: donated
What role could the Swiss abroad play here?
The Swiss abroad have the opportunity
to embrace and convey both concepts –
“Heidi” and “high-tech” – as acting in synthesis rather than conflicting. They can attend traditional yodelling events in the
mountains, on one hand, but also participate in political life in Switzerland thanks
to the technologically advanced system of
e-voting, on the other hand.
Popular initiatives
No new popular initiatives had been launched since the publication of edition 4/2013 of
“Swiss Review” and by the time of going to press for this edition. The list of pending
popular initiatives can be found at www.bk.admin.ch under Aktuell > Wahlen und Abstimmungen > Hängige Volksinitiativen.
FDFA OFFICIAL COMMUNICATIONS OFFICER:
PETER ZIMMERLI, RELATIONS WITH THE SWISS ABROAD
BUNDESGASSE 32, 3003 BERNE, SWITZERLAND,
TEL: +41 800 24 7 365
WWW.EDA.ADMIN.CH, EMAIL: [email protected]
Advertisement
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trav
www.
30
Echo
Little gems
Small book but
highly pleasurable reading
Arno Camenisch comes from the canton
“where driving was banned until 1925”, as he
himself once said – from the canton of
Grisons, that is. Camenisch, born in 1978, is
now an author. These days, he lives in Biel/
Bienne rather than Grisons but still has a
strong affinity with his childhood home.
This is also apparent in his first book “Sez
Ner”. In this small book – where German
and Romansh are printed side by side – an
alpine herdsman, his helper, a cattle herder
and a swine herder tell of their work on the
alpine pastures at the foot of the Piz Sezner
mountain. Camenisch’s work is not a contin-
uous narrative and certainly does not depict
an alpine idyll. It is a loose sequence of scenes
in which the author’s delight in the comical
and sometimes grotesque continually comes
to the fore. Literary critic Hardy Ruoss has
described the book as “a great linguistic phe-
nomenon, perhaps
even a linguistic surfeit but most certainly a linguistic celebration”. “Sez Ner”
has already been
translated
into
French, Italian, Dutch, Hungarian and Rumanian, while translations into Spanish and
English will follow shortly. The book is published by a small Swiss publishing house, Urs
Engeler. “Sez Ner” is also available as an audio book in German and Romansh. (BE)
Reading by Camenisch at the Leipzig Book Fair on
YouTube:
www.youtube.com/watch?v=kOkgtaf1Sms
Bernese bear joins
the Swiss abroad
Radio for
folk music lovers
“Please, please keep playing your
wonderful folk music”, “God
bless you, please keep the site going”, “It would feel like the end
of the world if your station
stopped transmitting,” – dozens
of comments with compliments
like these can be found on the
homepage of “Radio Heimatklang”. Since the Emmentalbased radio station first went on
air a year and a half ago, its fan
base and number of supporters
has constantly risen. 25,000 listeners from all over the world
tune into “Radio Heimatklang”
every day. The driving force behind the project is Marc Lauper,
who is today a pastor in Eggiwil
and previously spent six years
preaching in Canada. The station mainly broadcasts folk music from Switzerland and the alpine region and there is a sermon
from one of the Swiss national
churches on Sundays at 9.30 a.m.
CET. “Radio Heimatklang” can
be received via satellite, cable
and the Internet. (BE)
Berne is extremely fond of its
own heraldic animal, the bear.
The Bernese were therefore
astonished at the decision
made by the Bear Park in
Berne this summer to expel
one of its resident bears,
three-and-a-half-year-old
Berna, to Bulgaria. The reason was that Berna was behaving extremely badly. She was
aggressive towards her own
mother Björk and had given
her some nasty bites. These
attacks forced the park management to take action. The
Its website is very informative and
well presented.
www.heimatklang.ch
Video on YouTube: www.heimatklang.ch/heimatklang/youtubevideo2
S w i ss R e v i e w October 2013 / No. 5
Photo: donated
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Wealth management, protection against political risk, life and health insurances
Report on the General Assembly at www.soliswiss.ch, T +41 31 380 70 30
expatriated bear is being accommodated at the small zoo
in the Bulgarian provincial
town of Dobrich. Berna did
not put up any resistance and
seems happy in Dobrich.
Thanks to the support of an
NGO from Schaffhausen, the
zoo there is today a model for
animal-keeping and a fine example of successful development cooperation. Berna’s enclosure is far from modest: it
is located in the extensive
grounds of the former Dobrich residence of the former
socialist leader Todor
Zhivkov. (mul)
31
Bulletins
New head for
financial matters
Jacques de Watteville has been
appointed the new head of the
State Secretariat for International Financial Matters (SIF).
He will succeed State Secretary
Michael Ambühl. The 62-yearold Jacques de Watteville is currently the ambassador to
China. He was previously head
of the Swiss Mission to the European Union in Brussels from
2007 to 2012. Prior to that, he
was the Swiss ambassador to
Syria (2003–2007). Watteville’s
many years of experience, his
international profile and his excellent contacts were key factors in the Federal Council’s
decision to appoint him.
S w i ss R e v i ew October 2013 / No. 5
Photo: Keystone
Agreement with the
USA endorsed
Following in the footsteps of the
Council of States, the National
Council approved the Agreement on the Implementation of
the US Tax Law FATCA (Foreign Account Tax Compliance
Act) during the autumn session.
This law enables the USA to
force banks abroad to disclose
the accounts of US clients to its
tax authorities. The banks are
obliged to implement the law
from mid-2014 onwards or will
otherwise be excluded from the
US capital market. Opposition
to the Agreement mainly came
from the Swiss People’s Party
(SVP). It condemned the adoption of foreign tax law as unacceptable. Representatives of
other parties also expressed reservations over “US imperialism”
but viewed resistance as counterproductive.
Parliament in favour of new
fighter jets
The National Council overwhelmingly approved the purchase of 22 Gripen fighter jets
Quotes
at a cost of 3.1 billion Swiss
francs, with 113 members voting in favour during the autumn session. The Social
Democrats, Green Liberals
and left-wing groups immediately declared that they would
call a referendum to put the
deal before the Swiss people.
A referendum will almost certainly be held and looks set to
take place in 2014.
SP celebrates its
125th anniversary
The Swiss Social Democratic
Party, which was founded on 21
October 1888, celebrated its
125th anniversary in Berne on 7
September. Around 3,000
guests attended the celebrations,
including former Federal Councillors Ruth Dreifuss and Moritz
Leuenberger as well as one-time
party president Helmut Hubacher. There was a long round
of applause for the two incumbent Federal Councillors, Simonetta Sommaruga and Alain
Berset, who played “The Entertainer” by Scott Joplin – the
theme music for “The Sting” –
four-handed on the piano.
“We are being vilified and blackmailed, bigger countries are
ordering us around.”
Ueli Maurer, Swiss President, in his 1 August address
“The thinking person has the strange characteristic to like to create a
fantasy in the place of the unsolved problem.”
Johann Wolfgang vom Goethe, German poet (1749–1832)
“Switzerland is not surrounded by enemies. It is simply confronted
with changing realities.”
Alain Berset, Federal Councillor, in his 1 August address
“The importance of the law of might is again increasing at the expense of
international law. (…) Switzerland, which is committed to the principle
that law has precedence over power, must resist this trend.”
Federal Councillor Didier Burkhalter at this year’s
Ambassadors Conference in Berne
“To achieve the possible, we must attempt the impossible again
and again.”
Hermann Hesse, author and painter (1877–1962)
“The foundations of our political culture have survived much more uncertain times than these.”
Alain Berset, Federal Councillor
“Everything that needs to be said has already been said. But since no one
was listening, everything must be said again.”
André Gide, French author (1869–1951)
In a class of her own
Guilia Steingruber won Gold
in the All-Round event and on
all four pieces of apparatus at
the Swiss Artistic Gymnastics
Championships. In the vault,
her specialist event, the
19-year-old European champion was simply outstanding –
she obtained the top score for
the Chusovitina with 15,600
points. Following her success
in 2011, it is the second time
that Steingruber has triumphed in all five disciplines.
The most successful gymnast
in the men’s events was Kevin
Rossi, who won Gold in the
floor exercise, on the parallel
bars and on the high bar.
Niklaus Meienberg was what is commonly known as an enfant terrible. A journalist and author, he was analytical, provocative and meticulous in his research
into topics like suppressed aspects of Swiss history and the career of Federal
Councillor Elisabeth Kopp’s husband. His milieu studies and reportages remain
legendary, and his passionate use of sometimes almost baroque language adorned
with expressions from dialect and French, the language he loved so dearly, was
greatly admired. He died twenty years ago on 22 September 1993 – angst-ridden,
he took his own life. His works, most of which are still available, make highly
pleasurable reading even today.
Castagnata, Ascona, Ticino
“La castagnata”.
Chestnut festivals: a much-loved tradition
Every autumn, chestnut festivals attract guests from all over
the world to southern and central Switzerland, and to the
canton of Valais. They form part of the ceremonial setting
where thanks is given for an abundant chestnut crop.
“La castagnata” is celebrated in the cantons of Ticino and
Graubünden, where a festival is dedicated to the chestnut.
Once considered the “poor man’s bread”, nowadays chestnuts are used in pasta, honey, jams and more. Roasted
chestnuts are especially popular. Black on the outside,
golden on the inside, chestnuts are served hot and shelled
directly at the table, or enjoyed as part of traditional dishes
known as “brasché” or “maronatt”.
According to legend, the first chestnut trees in central
Switzerland were planted in the mid 15th century, in the
town of Kastanienbaum (LU). In Greppen, on Lake Lucerne,
the “Cheschtene-Chilbi” is still held today, showcasing
all of the chestnut products that Switzerland has to offer.
Brusio, in the Val Poschiavo, hosts a chestnut festival
known as “La Sagra della Castagna” in October, with hot,
sweet chestnuts, music and a market. Here, the chestnut
is a symbol of a long culinary and agricultural tradition.
In Fully (VS), in the canton of Valais, people have a special
attachment to roasted chestnuts. “La Brisolée” is a cosy
get-together with family and friends that takes place at
the height of the “Fête de la Châtaigne”.
A collaboration between Switzerland Tourism and the Organisation of the Swiss
Abroad (OSA)
A feast for the senses
During the Castagnata in Ascona, chestnuts
are roasted on the main square. This festival
features folk music, colourful activities, crafts
made from chestnuts, even ice cream.
MySwitzerland.com, Webcode BD90182
Traditional or royal
“La Brisolée” in Fully takes place during the
hunting season. Traditionally, chestnuts are
roasted on a log fire. When enjoyed with
sausage products, the dish is known as “royal”.
MySwitzerland.com, Webcode
BE90182
Cuisine and culture
Hundreds of people flock to the chestnut
festival in Brusio to celebrate the chestnut
crop that used to feed the population all
winter long in the olden days.
MySwitzerland.com, Webcode
BF90182
Network Switzerland:
Romantik Hotel Chesa SalisÛ, Bever
Register on MySwitzerland.com/aso to win
a two-night stay for two people at the Swiss
Historic Hotel Chesa Salis in Bever near
St. Moritz, a hotel with the charm of a private
home.
MySwitzerland.com, Webcode
A54443